An estimated 6,000 home watch companies operate across the United States, yet the vast majority still run their businesses without a unified software system, according to Clem McDavid, founder of HomeLedger. This technology gap is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore as the industry faces growing attention from larger entrants and roll-up firms.
McDavid, who has spent years interviewing home watch operators, found that most rely on manual processes: handwritten notes, photos stored on personal devices, and reports assembled from scattered sources. Invoicing is handled separately, routing is figured out each morning, and client communications are fragmented across texts, emails, and voicemails. When a client requests a past inspection record, operators often must dig through files, hoping the naming convention holds up.
“If it’s three minutes or less, great,” McDavid said. “If it’s ‘I’ve got to go look through my files and whatever naming conventions you have your PDF saved under,’ that’s not great.” For a business built on trust and accountability to absentee homeowners, this gap between promise and delivery is significant.
The National Home Watch Association lists about 1,000 members, but McDavid estimates the actual number of home watch companies is closer to 6,000, and that figure grows when including home concierge services for primary residences. These companies range from one-person operations to established businesses generating hundreds of thousands of dollars annually.
HomeLedger’s Watch Tower platform, currently available via a waitlist, aims to address this gap. McDavid describes an operator using the platform: routes are pre-planned, GPS verifies on-site visits, inspection reports are submitted in real time, and clients receive them immediately. Invoicing, team management, and messaging all reside in the same system.
The cost of inaction may be rising. The home watch industry is attracting unprecedented attention from roll-ups and larger, better-capitalized entrants eyeing a fragmented market of small operators. For those still running on manual systems, the window to professionalize on their own terms is narrowing. Operators who transition to purpose-built platforms are building defensible businesses with documented processes, auditable records, and consistent client experiences.
“The technology gap in home watch is real. It is also closeable,” McDavid said. “The operators who close it first are the ones most likely to still be running their own companies when the next wave of consolidation arrives.”
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