Fieldwire manages plans and coordinates tasks. Sitemark verifies grade, tracks calibration, and generates as-built documentation. They serve different field roles.
Quick answer
The main difference between Sitemark and Fieldwire is what they are built to do. Fieldwire is a plan management and field coordination platform — it gives crews access to drawings, tracks punch lists, and manages task assignments on a job site. Sitemark is an elevation verification and grade documentation platform — it logs grade shots, calculates deviations from design, verifies pipe laser runs, tracks calibration, and generates as-built PDFs. Fieldwire ranges from $29-54/mo per user. Sitemark Field Pro starts at $29/mo flat, with no per-user scaling.
Fieldwire pricing is per-user and scales with team size. The Professional tier is $29/mo per user; Business is $54/mo per user. Sitemark is a flat monthly rate. Pricing as of 2026.
Fieldwire solves a coordination problem: getting the right drawings, tasks, and information to the right people on a job site. For a GC superintendent or project manager, it is a strong tool.
Sitemark solves a verification problem: proving that the field work matches the design. For a grading contractor, utility sub, or sewer crew, that verification record is the deliverable — not the plan access.
At the same $29/mo entry price, the decision comes down to what you actually need. If grade verification, calibration records, and as-built documentation are your workflow, Sitemark was built for it. Fieldwire was not.
Fieldwire Professional is $29/mo per user and Business is $54/mo per user, so a three-person team costs $87-162/mo. Sitemark Field Pro is $29/mo flat regardless of how many team members access a job. For any crew larger than one person, Sitemark is less expensive at the entry level.
No. Fieldwire is built for plan management, task coordination, and punch lists. It does not support grade shot logging, deviation calculations, elevation profile charts, pipe laser verification, calibration tracking, or as-built generation from field measurements.
Yes. Some contractors use Fieldwire for plan access and site coordination alongside Sitemark for field grade documentation and as-built generation. They address different workflows and do not overlap significantly.
Sitemark is not a substitute for Fieldwire if plan access and punch list management are what you need. It is the right tool if grade verification, elevation logging, calibration tracking, and as-built documentation are your requirements. Most grading and utility contractors find Sitemark covers their core field documentation workflow without the plan management features they do not use.
Fieldwire provides drawing and plan access, annotation tools, punch list management, task assignment, and field inspection coordination. If those coordination workflows are central to your operation, Fieldwire addresses them and Sitemark does not.
Grade shot logging, calibration tracking, elevation verification, and one-click as-built PDFs — built for the contractor holding the instrument.
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