# Best Free Employee Scheduling Software in 2026
The best free employee scheduling software in 2026, compared by limits, time tracking, mobile apps, pricing, and when free stops making sense.
Source: https://turnozo.com/blog/best-free-scheduling-apps-small-teams
Published: 2026-02-25
Updated: 2026-06-03
Category: comparisons
Tags: free scheduling apps, scheduling software, small business, software comparison
## Quick answer

**Best free employee scheduling software:** Turnozo is the strongest free option for teams up to 10 employees that need scheduling, mobile time tracking, GPS/geofencing, availability, absences, shift swaps, and timesheets without feature gating.

**Best by use case:** Turnozo for full scheduling plus time tracking under 10 employees; Sling for scheduling-only teams up to 30 users; Homebase for one-location teams; Connecteam for broader operations under 10 users; Google Sheets only for very small teams with simple schedules.

**Free-plan caveat:** Compare what the free plan includes, not just the employee cap. Many free scheduling apps exclude time tracking, GPS, shift swaps, labor reports, or multi-location support.

| Fact | Turnozo answer |
| --- | --- |
| Category | Free employee scheduling software for small teams |
| Free limit | Free up to 10 employees |
| Included on free plan | Scheduling, time tracking, GPS/geofencing, availability, absences, shift swaps, timesheets, and mobile apps |
| Paid pricing | €2.47/person/month after 10 employees |
| Main trade-off | The free cap is lower than Sling's scheduling-only cap, but Turnozo includes more operational features |
| Best alternatives to compare | Sling, Homebase, Connecteam, 7shifts, Findmyshift, and Google Sheets |

If you search for **free employee scheduling software**, you are usually trying to avoid two things at once: spreadsheet chaos and surprise upgrade walls. Fair. A scheduling app should not become expensive the moment you need employees to clock in or check shifts on their phone.

This guide compares free scheduling software by the limits that actually matter: employee caps, time tracking, mobile apps, locations, and what happens when your team grows. Some free plans are genuinely useful. Others are demos wearing a free-plan costume.

I run [Turnozo](/), so yes, I'm biased. Turnozo is free for up to 10 employees with every feature included. Beyond that, it's €2.47/employee/month. I'll still be blunt about where Sling, Homebase, Connecteam, 7shifts, and spreadsheets make more sense.

> **Calculator: What Does Full Scheduling Actually Cost?:** Interactive element available in the full article.

## Is free employee scheduling software actually free?

Before comparing apps, understand the three flavors of "free" in scheduling software:

**1. Free forever with limits.** You get core features but hit walls. Usually a cap on employees, locations, or features like time tracking. Sling and Homebase do this.

**2. Free trial.** Full features for 14-30 days, then you pay. When I Work and Deputy work this way. These are not really free apps. They are paid apps with a test drive.

**3. Free for small teams.** Some tools are free up to a user cap, then charge when you grow. Turnozo and Connecteam are the cleaner examples here because the free limit is a team-size cap, not a stripped-down feature tier.

If you genuinely need scheduling software that costs nothing forever, your real options are Turnozo, Sling, Homebase, Connecteam, 7shifts, Findmyshift, and Google Sheets. The right pick depends on whether you care more about employee cap, time tracking, locations, or simplicity.

## How we compared the free plans

Last checked: June 2026. We looked at public pricing pages and product limits for each tool, then judged the free plan by five practical questions:

1. Can a small team use it permanently, or is it just a trial?
2. Does the free plan include time tracking, or only shift planning?
3. Can employees use it from their phones without extra setup?
4. Does it work across more than one location?
5. What is the first paid plan you are likely to need after the free limit?

That last question matters. A free plan is not a bargain if the first realistic upgrade is expensive, confusing, or missing the same features you wanted in the first place.

### Methodology and source notes

We treated free trials as paid products, not free scheduling software. For each app, we checked the public free-plan limit, whether time tracking is included, whether employees can use the mobile app, and the first paid plan a growing team would likely need. Pricing changes, so verify the vendor's current pricing page before buying.

## 1. Turnozo - Best free plan if you want every feature included

**Cost:** Free up to 10 employees. After that, €2.47/employee/month. No credit card required.

**What you get:** Scheduling, time tracking, GPS clock-in, geofencing, shift swaps, availability management, timesheets, absence management, mobile app. Everything.

Turnozo is the cleanest free option if your team is small and you want the full workflow from day one: scheduling, time tracking, GPS clock-in, availability, shift swaps, absence management, timesheets, and mobile apps.

The limit is simple: 10 employees. Under that, the product is free with every feature included. Above that, it is €2.47/user/month. No feature tiers, no per-location fees, no "upgrade to unlock time tracking" moment.

The [free plan (up to 10 employees)](/) gives you full access to decide if it's worth it. If it's not, you've lost nothing.

**Best for:** Teams that want scheduling and time tracking in one simple tool without hitting upgrade walls.

**Where it falls short:** The free plan stops at 10 employees. If you have 20-30 employees and need scheduling only, Sling may be cheaper at first. If you want a broader all-in-one operations app, Connecteam covers more surface area.

## 2. Sling

![Sling free employee scheduling app](/blog/screenshots/sling-homepage.png)

- Best free plan for scheduling-only teams

**Free plan:** Scheduling, time-off requests, messaging, news feed. Up to 30 users.

**What's missing on free:** Time tracking, labor costs, shift swaps, overtime alerts.

**Paid plans:** Premium at $2/user/month, Business at $4/user/month.

Sling's free plan is the most generous for pure scheduling. You get unlimited scheduling for up to 30 employees with no time limit. The interface is clean, the mobile app works well, and your team can actually see their schedules without calling you.

The catch is that "scheduling" on the free plan means building and sharing shifts. It doesn't include time tracking. If you need employees to clock in and out from their phones, you need Premium ($2/user/month). No GPS verification on the free plan either.

**Best for:** Teams that just need to build and share a schedule. If "who works when" is your only problem, Sling's free plan solves it.

**Where it falls short:** The moment you need time tracking, overtime monitoring, or labor cost visibility, you're paying. And at $2/user, the gap between Sling Premium and other paid options like [Turnozo](/) (€2.47/user) narrows fast.

## 3. Homebase

![Homebase free scheduling for one location](/blog/screenshots/homebase-homepage.png)

- Best free plan for one location

**Free plan:** Scheduling, time tracking, messaging. One location, unlimited employees.

**What's missing on free:** Multi-location, shift trades, department scheduling, early access to new features.

**Paid plans:** Essentials at $24.95/month per location, Plus at $59.95/month per location.

Homebase has a legitimately useful free plan. You get scheduling AND basic time tracking for unlimited employees at a single location. That's more than most free plans offer.

The limitation is hard: one location. The moment you open a second shop, cafe, or office, you either pay $24.95/month per location or juggle two separate accounts. For a single-location business, though, this is hard to beat on pure value.

The elephant in the room: [cancellation complaints](/blog/best-homebase-alternatives). Reddit has multiple threads from users who tried to cancel and kept getting billed. It's worth reading those before committing, even to a free plan. You're still handing over your data and your team's information.

**Best for:** Single-location businesses that want scheduling plus basic time tracking for free.

**Where it falls short:** Multi-location is a non-starter. The jump from free to paid ($24.95/month per location) is steep. And if your team grows past what the free plan handles well, switching later means migrating your entire schedule and team.

## 4. Connecteam

![Connecteam free plan for small teams](/blog/screenshots/connecteam-homepage.png)

- Best free plan for broad operations

**Free plan:** Full access to all features. Up to 10 users.

**What's missing on free:** Nothing feature-wise. It's a user cap.

**Paid plans:** Operations Hub at $29/month for up to 30 users.

Connecteam's free plan is unusual because it doesn't lock features. You get everything: scheduling, time tracking, forms, chat, task management. The limit is 10 users, period.

For a team of 10 or fewer, this is technically the most feature-rich free option. But there's a catch that matters for small businesses: the interface is complex. Connecteam was built to do everything, which means it takes longer to learn and set up than a focused scheduling tool.

The other catch: when you hit user 11, the jump is $29/month flat. That's not per user. It's a flat fee for the Operations Hub (scheduling + time tracking). If you have 11 employees, you're paying $2.64/user. At 30, it's $0.97/user. The math only works if you're growing into it.

**Best for:** Teams under 10 who want an all-in-one tool and don't mind the learning curve.

**Where it falls short:** Overkill for teams that just need scheduling. The jump from free (10 users) to paid ($29/month) feels abrupt. And the three separate "Hubs" (Operations, Communications, HR) each cost $29/month if you want them all.

## 5. Findmyshift

![Findmyshift scheduling software](/blog/screenshots/findmyshift-homepage.png)

- Best for very small teams

**Free plan:** Full scheduling features. Up to 5 employees.

**What's missing on free:** More than 5 team members.

**Paid plans:** Starter at $25/month, Business at $40/month, Enterprise at $80/month.

Findmyshift is a web-based scheduling tool from the UK that's been around since 2004. The free plan covers up to 5 employees with full scheduling capability. It's straightforward: build a schedule on a grid, employees check it online.

The interface feels older than the alternatives on this list. It works, but it doesn't have the modern mobile-first design that Sling or Homebase offer. If your team primarily checks schedules on their phones, this might feel clunky.

**Best for:** Very small teams (under 5) who work from desktops and want simple grid-based scheduling.

**Where it falls short:** The 5-user cap is tight. The mobile experience isn't great. And the jump to paid ($25/month flat) is expensive per-user if you only have 6-7 people.

## 6. Google Sheets - The DIY option

**Cost:** Free forever.

**What's missing:** Everything that makes a scheduling app an app. Notifications, mobile clock-in, availability requests, shift swaps, time tracking.

Let's be honest: a lot of small teams are scheduling in a spreadsheet already. And for some of them, that's fine.

If you have 3-5 employees, shifts rarely change, and nobody needs to clock in, a Google Sheet with a [simple template](/blog/spreadsheet-vs-scheduling-software-when-to-switch) does the job. It's familiar, it's shareable, and it costs nothing.

The problems start when:

- Employees need to check their schedule on their phone (sharing a Google Sheet link works but it's not great on mobile)
- Someone requests time off and you need to track it
- You want to know who's actually clocking in on time
- You have more than one location

If any of those apply, you've outgrown the spreadsheet.

**Best for:** 3-5 employees with stable, predictable shifts.

**Where it falls short:** Everything beyond "here's when you work this week."

## 7. 7shifts

![7shifts free restaurant scheduling](/blog/screenshots/7shifts-homepage.png)

- Free for restaurants

**Free plan:** Scheduling for one location, up to 30 employees.

**What's missing on free:** Time tracking, labor budgeting, manager log book, tip management.

**Paid plans:** Entrée at $34.99/month per location, The Works at $76.99/month per location.

If you run a restaurant specifically, 7shifts is worth looking at. The free plan covers basic scheduling for up to 30 employees at one location. The interface is designed for food service, with features like shift pools and availability that make sense for restaurant workflows.

The downside: 7shifts is restaurant-only by design. If you run a retail shop, [cleaning company](/for/cleaning), or [gym](/for/gyms), the terminology and workflow won't fit. And the paid plans are expensive. $34.99/month per location for time tracking is steep compared to per-user pricing models.

**Best for:** Single-location restaurants that need scheduling and nothing else.

**Where it falls short:** Restaurant-only. No time tracking on free. Expensive jump to paid plans.

## Quick comparison: free plans side by side

| App           | Free user limit        | Time tracking | Mobile app | Multi-location |
| ------------- | ---------------------- | ------------- | ---------- | -------------- |
| Turnozo       | 10 employees           | Yes           | Yes        | Yes            |
| Sling         | 30 users               | No            | Yes        | Yes            |
| Homebase      | Unlimited (1 location) | Basic         | Yes        | No             |
| Connecteam    | 10 users               | Yes           | Yes        | Yes            |
| Findmyshift   | 5 users                | No            | Limited    | Yes            |
| Google Sheets | Unlimited              | No            | Sort of    | No             |
| 7shifts       | 30 users (restaurants) | No            | Yes        | No             |

> **Turnozo CTA:**
> **Done with free plan limitations?** Turnozo includes scheduling, time
>   tracking, GPS clock-in, and timesheets at one price. No feature gating.

## When does free employee scheduling software stop making sense?

Free scheduling apps work well when:

- You fit inside the free user or location limit
- The free tier includes the features your team actually needs
- Shifts are relatively stable week to week
- You are not spending extra time working around missing features

Free stops making sense when:

- You need time tracking and keep hitting the paywall
- You're spending more time managing the free tool's limitations than actually scheduling
- You've grown past the user cap and the jump to paid is steep
- You need features across multiple locations

The math is simple. If a free app takes you 30 extra minutes per week compared to a cleaner paid setup, and your time is worth anything at all, a low-cost tool can pay for itself quickly. That does not mean every team should pay. It means the free plan should save time, not create a second admin job.

But if a free plan genuinely covers what you need, use it. There's no shame in not paying for software you don't need.

---

**Need help figuring out if free is enough for your team?** [Get started free with Turnozo](/) and test scheduling, time tracking, GPS clock-in, availability, and timesheets without a credit card. If a simpler free plan is enough for you, use that. Seriously.

_Related reading:_

- [Employee Scheduling Software: What to Look For in 2026](/blog/what-to-look-for-employee-scheduling-software)
- [Spreadsheet vs Scheduling Software: When to Switch](/blog/spreadsheet-vs-scheduling-software-when-to-switch)
- [The Real Cost of Manual Scheduling](/blog/real-cost-of-manual-scheduling)
- [Best Homebase Alternatives for Small Teams](/blog/best-homebase-alternatives)
- [Best Connecteam Alternatives for Small Teams](/blog/best-connecteam-alternatives)
- [Best Employee Scheduling Software Compared](/blog/best-employee-scheduling-software)
