Skip to content

decision

5 Curb Hero Alternatives for Open House Sign-In (2026)

Curb Hero alternatives ranked honestly — five open house sign-in options with pricing and trade-offs, plus a checklist for switching without losing leads.

10 min readJune 9, 2026

Curb Hero alternatives are usually searched for one of three reasons. You found out how the free app actually gets paid. You want your open house to carry your branding instead of a lender's. Or sign-in fell over at a listing with no Wi-Fi. All three are fair reasons. Curb Hero is genuinely popular, with a polished free product and 4.9 stars, and for plenty of agents it is the right call. But if one of those three things has started to grate, this list is for you: five real Curb Hero alternatives, ranked, with pricing and the trade-offs of each. Full disclosure up front: we build the app ranked first, and we will tell you exactly when not to pick it.

Comparison of Curb Hero alternatives for open house sign-in shown on an iPad kiosk

Why agents go looking for Curb Hero alternatives

The lender co-marketing model. Curb Hero is free because lenders fund it. That is not a rumor. Their own help center explains that a default lender may be assigned to your listings, and that when a visitor opts into mortgage-related questions, their information is shared with that lender. To be fair: this is disclosed, you can pair with a lender you already work with, and many agents have co-marketing relationships that make this a feature rather than a bug. But if you did not choose that lender, or your visitors do not realize their details are going to a third party off your iPad, the model starts to feel less free.

Branding limits. When a lender is part of the sign-in experience, the open house is no longer only your stage. Agents who spent years building a personal brand often want the kiosk, the follow-up, and the listing presence to carry their name and nobody else's. A free tool with someone else's logo in the flow has a real cost. You just pay it in attention instead of dollars.

Offline reliability. Open houses happen in vacant homes, basements, and new builds where Wi-Fi ranges from flaky to nonexistent. Any sign-in app that leans on a connection, whether for loading the form, validating the lead, or syncing in real time, has a bad day right when the room is busiest. If you have ever watched a kiosk spin while a visitor gave up and walked past it, you know why "works in a dead zone" sits at the top of so many switching lists.

If any of that sounds familiar, here are the apps like Curb Hero (and two non-app options) worth your attention. For the wider field beyond this shortlist, see our ranked list of every open house app or browse the comparison hub.

Five Curb Hero alternatives, ranked

RankAlternativeBest forPricingBiggest trade-off
1OpenHouseOffline-first sign-in with private, exportable leads$9.99/mo or $79.99/yr, 1-month free trialPaid; iPhone/iPad only
2Open Home ProAgents already in a tablet-based listing workflowFree tier; paid upgrade (see their site)Tablet-only sign-in; sync-later offline model
3ShowableTeams that want showing tools around sign-inPaid (see their site)Broader platform than a solo agent may need
4Paper sign-in sheetZero-tech backup that never crashesFree (printing costs)Manual data entry; illegible handwriting; no qualification
5Google FormsFree digital capture you assemble yourselfFreeGeneric look; needs internet; no kiosk mode; DIY everything

1. OpenHouse: best Curb Hero alternative for offline, ad-free lead capture

This is our app, so weigh the ranking accordingly. The reason it leads this list is that it maps one-to-one onto the reasons agents leave Curb Hero in the first place.

No lender ads, by architecture. OpenHouse has no co-marketing model because it has no backend at all. Visitor sign-ins are written to local storage on your iPad and never leave the device unless you export them. There is no account to create, no cloud to sync to, and no third party, lender or otherwise, anywhere in the data path. You are the customer, so nobody else needs to be.

Offline is the default, not a fallback. Most sign-in apps treat offline as an edge case to recover from. OpenHouse makes zero network calls during an event. The kiosk, the single-screen sign-in form, buyer qualification, and lead storage all run entirely on-device. A listing with no signal behaves the same as one with fiber.

Your branding, your follow-up. The kiosk carries your name and listing. Visitors are triaged as they sign in (unrepresented hot lead, represented buyer, neighbor, investor), and when the event ends you export wherever you already work: CSV, Contacts, vCard, email, or a share-to-CRM handoff. There is also a seller report to show your client what the event produced.

Pricing and the trade-offs, stated plainly. OpenHouse costs $9.99/month or $79.99/year with a one-month free trial. If your subscription ever lapses the app drops to a data-safe read-only mode, and your leads stay viewable and exportable forever. The trade-offs are real: it is not free, it is iPhone/iPad only (no Android, no web forms), and it deliberately is not a CRM or marketing suite. It captures and qualifies at the door, then gets out of the way. If you want drip campaigns and landing pages in the same login, this is not that tool. For a feature-by-feature look at how it stacks up against the app you are leaving, read the full OpenHouse vs Curb Hero breakdown; we will not duplicate it here.

OpenHouse iPad kiosk sign-in form, an offline alternative to Curb Hero

2. Open Home Pro: best for agents already living on a tablet

Open Home Pro is one of the oldest names in this category and a reasonable Curb Hero competitor if you want an established tool from a larger real estate company. It covers the basics, from digital sign-in and lead questions to follow-up emails, and it has been around long enough that many brokerages already know it.

The trade-offs: sign-in is tablet-only, so there is no phone fallback if your iPad battery dies mid-event. Its offline handling is also a sync-later model. Sign-ins queue locally and reconcile when a connection returns, rather than the app being designed to never need one. That works fine until the day it doesn't, and "did those three leads from the basement actually sync?" is not a question you want on a Monday. Development has also been visibly slow in recent years, so check that the current version still fits your workflow before committing.

3. Showable: best for teams that want showing tools around sign-in

Showable approaches sign-in from the showing-management side, and the team there has published a useful comparison of open house sign-in apps that is worth reading even if you land elsewhere. It covers the field with more candor than most vendor content. If you run a team and want sign-in to live inside a broader showing and feedback workflow, it is a credible option.

The trade-off is scope. A solo agent who just wants visitors captured and qualified at the door may be paying for, and navigating around, platform surface they will never use. Pricing is on their site; weigh it against how much of the platform you will actually touch.

4. A paper sign-in sheet: still a real Curb Hero alternative

No battery, no Wi-Fi, no app review. A clipboard with a well-designed sheet has captured leads at open houses for decades, and as a backup it belongs in every agent's bag regardless of which app you run. We maintain printable sign-in sheet templates you can use today for exactly this.

The trade-offs are the ones that pushed everyone to apps in the first place. Handwriting you cannot read. Phone numbers with seven digits. Visitors who can see everyone above them on the list, which is a real privacy concern. Zero qualification, and an evening of manual data entry per event. Paper never crashes, but it also never does anything. Run it as your main system in 2026 and it costs you more in transcription time than most subscriptions cost in money.

5. Google Forms: free, if your time is

A Google Form on an iPad is the duct-tape Curb Hero alternative. It costs nothing, bends to whatever questions you want, and responses land in a spreadsheet automatically. If you are technical and patient, you can build qualification logic with branching questions and even lock the iPad to the form using Apple's Guided Access as a makeshift kiosk mode.

The trade-offs stack up fast. Forms need an internet connection to submit, which puts you right back in the dead-zone problem. The experience looks like a survey, not a listing. There is no lead triage, no follow-up tooling, no seller report, and nobody to call when something breaks. It is a fine experiment for your first open house or two. It is a frustrating permanent home.

Don't switch from Curb Hero if…

A fair list owes you this section. Stay where you are if:

  • Free is the deciding factor and the lender model does not bother you. Curb Hero's disclosure is public, the product itself is polished, and its 4.9-star rating is earned. If you have read how the lender pairing works and you are comfortable, or you already co-market with a lender you like, the price is unbeatable.
  • You actively use the marketing suite. If Curb Hero's QR codes, listing pages, and follow-up tools are load-bearing parts of your business, a narrower sign-in app means rebuilding those elsewhere.
  • You need Android or web-based sign-in. Several Curb Hero alternatives on this list, ours included, are Apple-only.

Switching tools has a cost in habit and setup time. Make sure the thing that bothers you about Curb Hero is worth that cost. For many agents it is. Not for all of them.

How to switch from Curb Hero without losing a single lead

Next steps, in order:

  1. Export your lead history first. Before you cancel or delete anything, download your existing leads from your Curb Hero account. Do this while your access is fully active.
  2. Import the CSV somewhere you control, whether that is your CRM, Google Contacts, or a spreadsheet. Verify the columns survived (names, emails, phones, listing notes).
  3. Set up the new tool before the next event, not the morning of. Build your sign-in questions, test the kiosk flow, and run a fake visitor through it.
  4. Run one open house in parallel if you are nervous. New app on the iPad, paper sheet on the table as backup.
  5. Check the exit door on the new app too. Whatever you pick should have a clean way out of any app. If your next tool cannot export your leads as easily as it imports them, you have traded one lock-in for another.

The rule behind all five steps: leads you captured belong to you, and the moment to secure them is before you switch, not after.

Frequently asked questions

Why is Curb Hero free?

Curb Hero is monetized through lender co-marketing. Its help center explains that a default lender may be assigned to your listings, and when visitors opt into mortgage questions their information is shared with that lender. The app costs you nothing because the lender relationship funds it.

What is the best Curb Hero alternative if my listings have bad Wi-Fi?

Pick a tool that works fully offline rather than syncing later. OpenHouse captures, qualifies, and stores every sign-in on the iPad itself with zero network calls, so a dead-zone listing behaves exactly like one with perfect Wi-Fi.

Is there a free alternative to Curb Hero?

Yes — a paper sign-in sheet with a printable template is free, and Google Forms is free if you can live with a generic form and manual lead handling. Every free option trades away something: polish, qualification, kiosk lockdown, or your time.

How do I switch from Curb Hero without losing my leads?

Export your existing lead history from your Curb Hero account first, before you stop using it. Once your leads are out as a CSV you can import them into your CRM or contacts, then run your next open house on the new tool.

Keep exploring

compare

OpenHouse vs Curb Hero: Which Sign-In App Fits You?

OpenHouse vs Curb Hero: a fair, sourced comparison of the free lender-funded sign-in app and the paid private one, so you can pick the right fit.

Visit page

features

Export Open House Leads to CSV, Contacts & CRM

Export open house leads to CSV, PDF, vCard, or straight into your CRM in one tap — and keep them exportable even if your subscription lapses.

Visit page

compare

The Best Open House Apps in 2026 (Honest List)

Best open house apps for 2026, ranked by people who make one of them — full disclosure, real pricing, and the trade-off every roundup leaves out.

Visit page