DoorLoop vs Buildium: Which Is Right for Independent Property Managers in 2026?
Side-by-side breakdown of DoorLoop and Buildium for independent PMs running mixed portfolios. Pricing, features, and the questions both vendors don't volunteer.
If you run under 30 doors and want the cleanest onboarding, DoorLoop wins on day one. If you run 50+ doors with active accounting and a mature operations workflow, Buildium pulls ahead on depth. Below 50 doors, the per-door pricing on both starts to feel disproportionate to what you get — which is the wedge for newer flat-priced platforms.
This isn't a "they're both great, depends on your needs" review. It's a side-by-side that picks winners per scenario, with the questions you should ask before signing either contract.
TL;DR verdict
- Choose DoorLoop if: you're under 30 doors, value modern UI and tenant-facing experience, want fast onboarding, and your accounting workflow is straightforward (single owner or a handful of owners).
- Choose Buildium if: you're 50+ doors, you do full property accounting (owner draws, trust reconciliation, 1099s, custom reports), or you manage HOAs/associations alongside rentals.
- Choose neither if: the per-door math doesn't justify the spend for your portfolio size. That's a real answer at 5–25 doors, and worth a look at flat-pricing platforms before committing.
Pricing side-by-side
Both vendors price per unit, with platform tiers on top. Numbers below are the 2026 published list rates for residential portfolios paid annually. Treat any verbal discount as not-real until it's in writing.
| Plan | DoorLoop (per unit/mo) | Buildium (per unit/mo) |
|---|---|---|
| Starter / Essential | ~$59/mo flat (1–20 units cap) | $58/mo flat, then per-unit (1–150 units) |
| Mid | ~$1.50–$2.50/door above starter | ~$2/door above starter |
| Premium / Growth | Custom (negotiated) | ~$2.50/door, add-ons unlocked |
The fee categories most operators don't see coming:
- Tenant payment processing. Both charge a small per-transaction fee for ACH and a percent for cards. Volume adds up. Confirm whether you can pass card fees to tenants in your state.
- Application screening. Per-application fees (typically $25–$45), usually re-billed to the applicant — but only legal in some states.
- eSignature credits. DoorLoop bundles some, Buildium often charges per envelope above a threshold.
- Owner portal seats. Generally included, but premium reports may be tier-locked.
- Setup / data migration. Buildium offers paid concierge migration. DoorLoop's white-glove onboarding is a marketing line — clarify exactly what's included.
At 25 doors, both land in the $400–$600/mo range once add-ons settle. At 100 doors, you're looking at $1,200–$1,900/mo on Buildium and a comparable figure on DoorLoop's mid tier. That's not nothing.
Features that actually matter for independent PMs
Marketing pages list every feature ever shipped. Here's the operator-relevant scorecard.
Trust accounting
- Buildium: Built-in, audited workflow. Three-way reconciliation is straightforward. Owner draws, hold-backs, and reserve management work the way a state regulator expects.
- DoorLoop: Trust accounting is supported but feels lighter. Smaller portfolios with simple structures handle it fine; mature accounting workflows occasionally feel like they're working around the tool.
Edge: Buildium.
Tenant experience
- DoorLoop: Modern, fast tenant portal. Apps work well. Maintenance request UX is best-in-class for this tier.
- Buildium: Functional, dated. Gets the job done. Mobile experience is the weak point.
Edge: DoorLoop.
Reporting
- Buildium: Extensive built-in report library, custom report builder, exportable everywhere. Owner statement customization is deep.
- DoorLoop: Solid out-of-the-box reports. Customization is more limited; you'll hit ceilings around 50–75 doors if your owners want custom packets.
Edge: Buildium.
Leasing & marketing
- DoorLoop: Listing syndication is included. Application-to-signed-lease flow is the smoothest of the two.
- Buildium: Syndication included; UX is heavier. The leasing module shows its age.
Edge: DoorLoop.
Maintenance & vendor management
- Both: Work-order workflows, vendor portals, owner-visible status. Functionally comparable.
- DoorLoop edges slightly on tenant-facing UX; Buildium edges on vendor-management depth (insurance tracking, W-9 collection).
Edge: Tie.
Accounting integrations
- Buildium: Sync to QuickBooks Online (paid tier), more mature CSV/IIF export options for accountants.
- DoorLoop: QBO sync available; not as battle-tested for accountants who actually live in QB.
Edge: Buildium.
Onboarding & support
DoorLoop puts a lot of marketing into "white-glove onboarding." In practice, that means a setup call, a data import (you provide the CSV templates), and a couple of training sessions. If your data is messy — or trust accounting was a disaster at your old tool — expect to do a chunk of cleanup yourself.
Buildium's standard onboarding is more self-serve, with paid concierge available. Their knowledge base is genuinely deep. Support response times vary by tier — phone support on lower tiers is patchy.
For a 10–30 door operator, you'll feel the onboarding experience for about a month. For a 100+ door migration, expect a 4–8 week real timeline regardless of which vendor you choose.
Where each one breaks
Every tool has a known set of friction points. These come from operator threads, not vendor pages.
Where DoorLoop breaks
- Reporting ceilings at 50+ doors with multiple owner entities. Custom packets get harder.
- Trust-account depth. Fine for simple structures; harder when you're managing reserves with rules.
- Pricing opacity above the starter tier. Quotes vary; get yours in writing.
Where Buildium breaks
- UI fatigue. Operators who joined in the last three years often describe the experience as "1.0 inside a 2026 skin."
- Per-unit fees creep at 100+ doors. The line items add up; renewal negotiations are non-trivial.
- Mobile experience for staff. Tenant app is okay; staff-side mobile is thin.
The third option
If you're reading a DoorLoop vs Buildium comparison and the answer keeps coming back "the math is uncomfortable at my door count," there's a structural reason. Both tools price per door because per-door pricing is what their margin model requires. That's the wedge for flat-priced platforms.
Proprietio is one of them — flat monthly pricing, no per-door fees, built specifically for US operators running mixed portfolios. We mention it once and move on; the broader point is that the per-door pricing question is worth asking out loud before you sign with either DoorLoop or Buildium.
If you'd like a deeper view on what's behind DoorLoop's headline number, see DoorLoop pricing: what they don't tell you and why property managers are leaving AppFolio for the same dynamic playing out one tier up.
Decision matrix
| If you are… | Best choice |
|---|---|
| 5–25 doors, single owner | DoorLoop or flat-priced |
| 25–50 doors, mixed owners, light accounting | DoorLoop |
| 50–100 doors, mature accounting workflow | Buildium |
| 100+ doors, multi-entity, full PM accounting | Buildium |
| Manage HOA/associations alongside rentals | Buildium |
| Tenant-experience-first focus | DoorLoop |
| Cost sensitivity is the top driver | Flat-priced platform |
FAQ
Can I migrate from Buildium to DoorLoop (or vice versa) without losing data? Yes, but plan for 4–8 weeks and expect manual cleanup. Both tools export tenants, leases, financial history, and documents. Trust-account migration is the part to get right with your accountant.
Do either of them handle commercial properties? Both can hold a commercial lease, but neither has a strong commercial-specific workflow (CAM reconciliation, percentage rent, escalations). For mixed portfolios you'll feel that gap.
Which one is better for a brand-new property management business? DoorLoop, in most cases. Faster to stand up, friendlier tenant experience, easier first-90-days. Reevaluate at 50 doors.
Are there free alternatives that work at this scale? Free tiers exist (TenantCloud, Stessa, others), but they're tracker-grade at the doors-managed scale most operators have. See our piece on what "free property management software" actually gets you.
Run mixed portfolios? Try Proprietio free for 14 days — residential, condo, and commercial in one workspace, no per-door fees. proprietio.com