Quick Picks (TL;DR)
- HoneyBook — Best all-in-one for service-based freelancers who bill per project
- Bonsai CRM — Best for freelancers wanting proposals, contracts, and CRM in one subscription
- Folk — Best when your pipeline is built on referrals and warm intros
- Notion CRM template — Best zero-cost option if you're already a Notion user
- Dubsado — Best for freelancers with complex client onboarding workflows
Comparison Table
| Tool | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HoneyBook | Project-based service pros | No (7-day trial) | $16/mo (verify) | Proposals + invoices + CRM bundled |
| Bonsai CRM | Independent contractors | No (trial) | $17/mo (verify) | Freelance-specific legal templates |
| Folk | Referral-heavy pipelines | Yes (limited) | $20/mo (verify) | AI contact enrichment |
| Notion CRM | Budget-conscious freelancers | Yes | $10/mo (verify) | Lives next to your project notes |
| Dubsado | Complex onboarding | No (3 clients free) | $20/mo (verify) | Deep workflow automation |
HoneyBook
Best for: Photographers, designers, copywriters, coaches — anyone who closes projects with a proposal and an invoice.
I switched to HoneyBook during a particularly chaotic month when I had six active client threads, three outstanding proposals, and zero idea which invoices were paid. The thing that struck me immediately was how it collapsed my workflow: one client-facing link sends the proposal, collects the signed contract, and triggers the invoice. My clients stopped emailing me asking "where do I sign?" and I stopped chasing payments.
Pros:
- Single client portal covers proposals, contracts, invoices, and messaging
- Automations handle follow-ups and onboarding emails without babysitting
- Calendar and scheduling built in
Cons:
- No meaningful free tier — you need to commit to a trial
- Pipeline views aren't as visual as Pipedrive
- Reporting is basic unless you upgrade
Who should skip it: Freelancers who only take on one or two clients at a time and manage everything over email without friction.
Bonsai CRM
Best for: Freelancers who want legally-defensible contracts alongside their pipeline.
What differentiates Bonsai from a generic CRM is the contract library. When I first started freelancing, I was sending Word doc contracts I'd cobbled together from blog posts. Bonsai's templates — written for US, UK, and Australian freelancers — are a genuine upgrade. The CRM side tracks your pipeline, and the same subscription covers time tracking and invoicing.
Pros:
- Freelance-specific legal templates reduce risk noticeably
- Proposal → contract → invoice flow is tight and client-friendly
- Time tracking built in — useful for hourly billing
Cons:
- CRM features are lighter than HubSpot or Pipedrive
- Best for US/UK/AU — international freelancers may find templates less relevant
- Mobile app is functional but not polished
Who should skip it: Freelancers in countries with very different contracting norms, or those who already have a lawyer-reviewed contract they love.
Folk
Best for: Freelancers who land work through introductions, LinkedIn connections, and past clients.
I tried Folk after a consultant friend insisted it changed how she managed relationships. She was right. Importing my contact list and watching Folk auto-fill company names, job titles, and LinkedIn profiles saved me an afternoon of research. For freelancers whose next gig usually comes from someone they already know, having that context instantly available is a real advantage. The AI outreach drafts aren't perfect, but they're a strong first pass.
Pros:
- Contact enrichment is faster than any manual process
- Relationship context (how you met, last touch) surfaced automatically
- Cleaner and less overwhelming than HubSpot
Cons:
- Pipeline and deal tracking is minimal
- Not designed for transaction-heavy or high-volume sales
- Free tier has strict contact limits
Who should skip it: Freelancers with a formal outbound process who need stages, activities, and follow-up sequences.
Notion CRM (Custom Template)
Best for: Freelancers on a tight budget who are already inside Notion every day.
There's something elegant about a Notion CRM when it's set up right. My client table sits three clicks from my project notes, my weekly review, and my invoicing log. I built mine from a free community template and spent an hour customizing it. The trade-off I made: I log everything manually, I built my own reminder system using Notion reminders, and I accepted there would be no email sync.
Pros:
- Free if you're on Notion's free or paid plan
- Infinitely flexible — add any field your workflow needs
- Great for freelancers who think in databases and views
Cons:
- No automation without a third-party tool like Zapier or Make
- Manual logging only — nothing syncs from your inbox
- You'll outgrow it fast once you have more than 20–30 active leads
Who should skip it: Freelancers who forget to log things. The system breaks down the moment your discipline does.
Dubsado
Best for: Freelancers with multi-step client onboarding (questionnaires, intake forms, welcome sequences).
Dubsado is the most automation-capable tool on this list. When I was onboarding brand strategy clients — each of whom needed a questionnaire, a strategy doc, two approval forms, and four milestone invoices — Dubsado's workflow builder was the only thing that kept me sane. You build a "canned workflow" once and it fires every step in sequence the moment a new client signs.
Pros:
- Workflow automation depth unmatched in this price range
- Client portal with forms, questionnaires, and file sharing
- Strong community of templates and walkthroughs
Cons:
- Steep learning curve — expect 4–6 hours to get fully set up
- UI feels dated compared to HoneyBook
- Overkill if your client onboarding is just "send a Calendly link"
Who should skip it: Freelancers with simple, fast engagements. The setup time won't pay off for short projects.
How to Choose / Verdict
Freelancers tend to fall into one of two buckets, and the right CRM depends on which you are.
If you sell time and projects (designers, writers, developers, photographers): HoneyBook or Bonsai. The bundled proposal-contract-invoice flow is the feature that actually saves you hours per client. Bonsai wins if contract templates matter to you; HoneyBook wins if you want a more polished client portal.
If you sell relationships (consultants, coaches, agencies-of-one): Folk or a Notion template. You're not running a high-volume pipeline — you're nurturing a small number of high-value relationships, and that calls for context and warmth over deal stages.
Dubsado is the specialist pick: it rewards the investment if your onboarding is complex, but it's too much for everyone else.
My top pick for most freelancers: HoneyBook. The free trial is enough to see whether it clicks, and the combined proposal-CRM-invoice flow is the single biggest time saver I've found in freelance tooling.
FAQ
Is a dedicated CRM worth it if I only have a handful of clients? Probably not. If you're managing fewer than five active clients at once, a spreadsheet or Notion template is fine. The ROI on a paid CRM kicks in when follow-ups, proposals, and invoicing start taking real time.
Can I use HubSpot as a freelancer? Yes, and many do. The free tier is excellent. The issue is that HubSpot is built for sales teams, not service delivery — so you'll need a separate invoicing and contract tool alongside it, which adds friction.
What's the difference between a CRM and an all-in-one freelance platform? A CRM tracks leads and relationships. An all-in-one (HoneyBook, Bonsai, Dubsado) also handles contracts, invoices, and sometimes project delivery. For freelancers, the all-in-one usually wins because client management and project delivery are inseparable.
Do any of these tools handle recurring retainer clients well? Bonsai and Dubsado handle recurring invoices cleanly. HoneyBook supports recurring billing too. Folk and Notion CRM don't — you'd need a separate invoicing tool for retainers.