Every landlord has signed up for a free property management tool at some point. The pitch is compelling: track your income and expenses, generate basic reports, manage your tenants, all for free. Why pay for something you can get for nothing?
The answer is that software development costs real money. Servers cost money. Engineers cost money. Customer support costs money. When a company offers all of this for free, they have a revenue model, it just isn't a subscription you agreed to pay. It's something else.
Understanding what that "something else" is should be part of every landlord's decision when choosing portfolio software. Here's a complete picture of how free property management tools really make money.
How free tools monetize your data
The most common revenue model for free SaaS tools is data monetization. This takes several forms in the landlord software space:
Aggregated data analysis and market intelligence
When thousands of landlords enter their rental income, vacancy rates, and property values into a single platform, that aggregated data becomes extraordinarily valuable as a market intelligence product. Real estate investors, lenders, hedge funds, and institutional buyers will pay significant sums to understand rental market trends, average rents by neighborhood, vacancy rates, and property value appreciation in specific markets.
Your individual data is "de-identified" and combined with other users' data before sale. But the aggregated dataset is built from your records. You contributed your data. You received nothing for it.
Lead generation for affiliated services
Many landlord platforms generate revenue by referring users to affiliated services: tenant screening, insurance, lending, maintenance providers, legal services. When you're shown a "recommended" service inside the app, that recommendation typically comes with a referral fee that the platform receives when you click or sign up.
This creates an incentive to show you services that maximize referral revenue, not necessarily the services that are best for you. The free portfolio tool becomes a distribution channel for paid products.
The acquisition play
Some free tools aren't built to generate revenue directly, they're built to be acquired. The goal is user growth and data accumulation, which creates value for a strategic acquirer. Stessa's acquisition by Roofstock is the textbook example: Stessa had limited revenue but enormous data assets and a loyal user base that Roofstock found valuable for their marketplace business.
The problem for users is that the acquiring company's priorities almost never align perfectly with the original product's user base. After an acquisition, the product typically changes: features are added that serve the acquirer's business model, features that competed with the acquirer's existing products are removed, and free tiers are compressed to monetize the user base for the acquirer.
Vendor lock-in: how it works
Vendor lock-in is the mechanism that makes data monetization and feature paywalling viable. Once your historical financial data, years of transaction records, tenant histories, property documents, is inside a platform, switching becomes costly. Not financially costly, necessarily, but in time and effort.
Consider what you'd lose by leaving a platform you've used for three years:
- Your complete transaction history, organized by property and category
- Tenant payment histories and ledgers
- Document archives, scanned leases, receipts, mortgage statements
- Historical reports and tax summaries
- Custom category rules and automations you've built over time
Most platforms offer data export, but the export format is rarely in a shape that transfers cleanly to another tool. You export a CSV, but the new tool has different category names, different property structures, and different transaction formats. The "export" is technically possible but practically painful.
This friction is a feature, not a bug, for the software company. The harder it is for you to leave, the more pricing power they have when they eventually monetize more aggressively.
Feature paywalling: the gradual squeeze
The lifecycle of a free landlord tool typically follows a predictable pattern:
Phase 1, Growth: Launch with a generous free tier that includes all core features. Attract users at scale by being cheaper (free) than alternatives. Grow the user base aggressively.
Phase 2, Consolidation: Begin introducing a paid tier with "advanced" features. Keep the core free tier functional to avoid alienating users, but create clear incentives to upgrade.
Phase 3, Monetization: Gradually move features from the free tier to paid tiers. Features that users have come to rely on are reclassified as "premium." The free tier becomes a lead generation tool for the paid tier, not a genuinely useful product on its own.
Stessa's progression illustrates this well. Features that were available to all users, including more detailed reporting and multi-property analytics, moved behind the Stessa Pro paywall as the platform matured. Users who built their workflow around the free tool now face a choice: pay the subscription or migrate.
By Phase 3, the migration cost (all that vendor lock-in) makes paying for the subscription the path of least resistance for many users, even if the subscription price is higher than they'd accept from a new tool they were evaluating fresh.
The true cost comparison
Let's model the actual cost of a "free" landlord tool over five years for a landlord with 5 properties:
5-Year Cost Model: 5 Properties
Stessa (free-to-paid transition)
Free year 1, $15/mo Pro from year 2
$720
over 5 years
Baselane ACH fees
$2 per ACH x 5 tenants x 12 months x 5 years
$600
in transaction fees alone
Data migration cost (switching)
10-20 hours of manual data work at your time value
$500-2,000
one-time migration cost
SealedFolio
Simple subscription, no transaction fees, no cloud
From $19/mo
no escalation
The comparison changes significantly when you account for the full picture. "Free" tools are often more expensive over a multi-year horizon than a straightforward paid product, especially once you factor in transaction fees, subscription creep, and the hidden cost of lock-in.
What to look for instead
The alternative to free cloud tools isn't necessarily expensive, it's honest. A product whose business model is clearly "you pay us, we give you software" has incentives that are aligned with yours. They succeed if the software is good. They fail if it isn't.
When evaluating any landlord software, ask:
- What is the explicit revenue model? If the answer is "it's free," dig deeper. How does the company pay its engineers?
- What's in the privacy policy about data use? Look for language about aggregated data, affiliated companies, and marketing use.
- Is export genuinely easy? Can you export all your data in a format another tool can actually use? If export is difficult, that's a lock-in warning sign.
- Who owns the company? VC-backed tools have external investors who need a return. That pressure eventually translates to monetization that doesn't necessarily serve users.
- What's the pricing history? Has the tool moved features behind a paywall before? That's predictive of future behavior.
Conclusion
Free property management software isn't charitable. It's a business strategy with a revenue model you implicitly agreed to when you signed up. The costs, data monetization, feature paywalling, lock-in friction, transaction fees, are real. They're just not as visible as a line item on an invoice.
That doesn't mean free tools are never the right choice. For a single property, low complexity, and limited data, a free tool may do exactly what you need. But for a growing portfolio where your financial data is genuinely sensitive and your time has real value, the total cost calculation looks different.
SealedFolio is a paid product with a straightforward revenue model: you pay once, you own the software, your data stays on your device. No transaction fees. No cloud storage of your records. No data monetization. No acquisition that changes the terms. The price is on the label.