The Rover alternative for going independent
The best Rover alternative depends on what you actually want. If you just want another marketplace, Wag and Care.com also take a cut — you're only choosing which commission to pay. The bigger alternative is going independent: run your own repeat clients on flat-fee software so you stop losing a fifth of every booking. Pupline is built for that — $12.99/mo, 0% commission, your brand on everything.
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Rover is a marketplace: it finds you clients and takes a cut of every booking — around 20% of what you earn — for as long as you use it.
Pupline is your back office: it runs the clients you already have for a flat fee and keeps 0% of what they pay you.
The differences that matter day to day.
Keep 100%
Pupline takes 0% of what your clients pay you. A flat monthly fee instead of a cut of every booking, forever.
One flat price
$12.99/mo gets every feature — no tiers to climb, no per-staff seats, and no fee that grows as your client book does.
No client portal
Your clients never make an account or download an app. They get a private link when there's something to do — request a visit, fill a Care Card, view a report.
What the marketplace cut actually costs
Rover keeps around 20% of what sitters and walkers earn (25% for RoverGO and in California), and charges owners a separate booking fee of about 11% on top. That 20% isn't a one-off finder's fee — it's a tax on every booking, forever, including the regulars who'd happily book you directly.
The math gets uncomfortable fast: on $2,000 of monthly bookings, a 20% cut is $400 a month — far more than any software subscription. Over a year of steady work that's thousands handed over for clients you already had. See it for your own numbers with the Rover Fees Calculator.
Give the marketplace its due
Rover is genuinely good at one thing: finding you clients when you're starting from zero. Millions of owners search it, it carries the trust of reviews and a known brand, and it handles payments and a booking guarantee. If you have no client base yet, that bundle is worth paying for — to start.
The honest play most pros land on: let a marketplace make the introductions, then move your repeat clients onto your own software so a growing share of your income never touches a commission. (Mind the terms — marketplaces usually restrict moving a client you met on the platform off it.)
What you get when you run your own clients
On your own software, the relationship and the data are yours: clients, pets, history and notes you can keep and export, not locked behind a platform. You keep 100% of what clients pay, recorded as branded invoices rather than skimmed by a cut.
And it actually runs your day — recurring schedules, a daily route between homes, the Vault for gate codes, photo and video report cards under your name — the operational work a marketplace was never built to do.
Pupline vs Rover, side by side.
What each one really costs.
When Rover is the better choice
If you're brand-new with no client base, or you only sit and walk occasionally and don't want to market yourself, Rover is worth it — it puts you in front of demand you couldn't reach alone and carries the trust to win that first booking. Use it to get found. The moment you have a handful of regulars, that's when running them on your own software stops the 20% eating your most loyal income.
Rover vs Pupline, answered.
What is the best Rover alternative for running my own clients?
If you mean another marketplace, Wag and Care.com are the main options — but they also take a commission, so you're just choosing which cut to pay. If you mean a way to stop paying commission altogether, the real alternative is going independent: build your own client base through referrals and local search and run it on flat-fee software like Pupline, which takes 0% of your bookings.
How much does Rover take, and how does that compare to Pupline?
Rover keeps about 20% of what sitters and walkers earn (25% for RoverGO and in California) and charges owners roughly an 11% booking fee on top. Pupline takes 0% — it's a flat $12.99/mo regardless of how much you book. On $2,000 of monthly bookings, Rover's cut is around $400 versus Pupline's $12.99 (figures accurate as of May 2026).
Can I move my Rover clients to my own booking system?
Be careful: marketplaces' terms usually restrict taking a client you met on the platform off it, so don't plan to poach bookings wholesale — check the terms first. The durable approach is to use the marketplace for discovery while building your own channels (referrals, a Google Business Profile, local social), and run those direct clients on flat-fee software with no cut.
Do I still need software if I use Rover?
If you only take the occasional marketplace booking, probably not. But once you have regular clients, software pays for itself: recurring schedules, a daily route, gate-code storage, photo updates and invoicing that a marketplace isn't built for — and it lets you run direct clients with no 20% cut. Many pros run both: the marketplace finds clients, the software runs them.
How we compare: We make Pupline, so weigh that accordingly — but we aim to be fair, and every page includes where Rover is the better choice. Rover details reflect publicly available information, accurate as of May 2026, and may change. Spotted something out of date? Tell us and we’ll fix it.
Sources:Rover Help Center — service feesNerdWallet — Rover vs Wag
More comparisons
All comparisonsThe features behind the switch
Invoicing
Branded PDF invoices from the visits you already finished.
Clients & Pets
Every household, every pet, every quirk — in one tidy place.
Scheduling
Recurring or one-off — and never double-booked.
Daily Route
Today's stops, in order, one tap from directions.
Report Cards
Send a photo recap that makes their whole day.
Run your business your way, for $12.99/mo.
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