RentRedi Alternative

Rentlane vs RentRedi: Feature and Pricing Comparison

RentRedi is a feature-rich mobile app for landlords — but its pricing model and tenant fees may not be the best fit for small portfolios. Here's how it stacks up against Rentlane.

Quick Overview: RentRedi in 2026

RentRedi has positioned itself as the mobile-first property management platform for landlords. Unlike many competitors, RentRedi has always prioritized its mobile app experience, which is a genuine differentiator in a market full of web-first tools.

RentRedi offers three pricing tiers: Start ($5/month), Grow ($12/month annual or $29.95/month monthly), and Pro (custom pricing). All plans include unlimited properties, online rent collection, and a 30-day money-back guarantee. Notable recent additions include AI-powered receipt categorization, custom listing websites, and credit bureau reporting for tenants.

It's worth noting that RentRedi does not offer a free tier — every plan requires payment, which sets it apart from competitors like TurboTenant and Avail.

Where RentRedi Does Well

Where RentRedi Falls Short

Where Rentlane Wins

Feature Rentlane RentRedi
Rent Collection via Zelle ACH/Card/Cash
Tenant Payment Fees $0 ~1% ACH / 3.5% card
Free Tier (starts at $5/mo)
Lease Signing via SMS In-app
SMS Lease Delivery
Tenant Screening Coming Soon TransUnion
Maintenance Tracking Coming Soon
Accounting & Reporting Coming Soon + AI receipts
Credit Reporting for Tenants Coming Soon
Mobile App Mobile-first Mobile-first
Tenant App Required No Yes
Annual Lock-in for Best Price No Yes
Landlord Cost (annual) $35/mo (paid) / $0 (free) $12/mo (Grow)

Pricing: Landlord Cost vs Total Cost

RentRedi's Grow plan at $12/month (annual) is cheaper than Rentlane's $35/month paid tier for the landlord. But let's look at the total picture:

With RentRedi, a tenant paying $1,500/month in rent pays roughly $15/month in ACH fees — that's $180/year per tenant. With 5 tenants, your ecosystem is generating $900/year in payment fees that go to payment processors.

With Rentlane, those fees are $0. The landlord pays $35/month ($420/year), but tenants pay nothing. The total cost is actually lower — and the tenant experience is dramatically better.

And if you're comparing free tiers: Rentlane has one, RentRedi doesn't. For a landlord just getting started with 1–2 units, that matters.

The Mobile App Question

Both Rentlane and RentRedi are mobile-first — which is rare in this space. RentRedi deserves credit here; their app is polished and feature-rich. However, RentRedi requires tenants to download a separate app, while Rentlane leverages Zelle (already in your tenant's banking app). This difference in tenant onboarding is significant: every friction point is a potential late payment.

Who Should Choose RentRedi?

Who Should Choose Rentlane?

💡 The hidden $900/year fee

With RentRedi, 5 tenants paying $1,500/month in rent generate roughly $900/year in ACH fees. That's money leaving your rental ecosystem — money that could be staying with your tenants, making them happier and more likely to pay on time. With Rentlane + Zelle, those fees simply don't exist.

Our Verdict

RentRedi is one of the strongest competitors in the space — especially for landlords who value a polished mobile app and comprehensive feature set. Its unlimited-units pricing is appealing for larger portfolios. But for small landlords who prioritize zero fees, tenant simplicity, and a no-commitment entry point, Rentlane offers a leaner, more focused alternative. If your main jobs are collecting rent and signing leases for a handful of units, Rentlane does those things with less friction and zero cost to tenants.

Related Resources

Ready to try a better RentRedi alternative?

Join the Rentlane beta — zero-fee rent collection via Zelle, SMS lease signing, and a free tier with no strings attached.

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