If you’re a transaction coordinator comparing software options, you’ve probably come across both DocJacket and ListedKit. Both use AI to read contracts and automate your workflow — but they take very different approaches to pricing, features, and how they fit into your business.
Here’s an honest, side-by-side breakdown to help you decide which one is the better fit.
Quick Verdict
Choose DocJacket if you’re a high-volume TC who wants flat-rate pricing, built-in SMS, intake forms, and a platform that handles communication — not just task management. You’ll pay the same whether you close 5 transactions or 50.
Choose ListedKit if you prefer pay-per-transaction flexibility, an AI assistant that handles actions from conversation, and you’re okay with fewer integrations.
Pricing Comparison
This is the biggest difference between the two platforms, and it matters more the busier you get.
DocJacket charges a flat $15/user/month (early adopter rate, locked for life) or $29/user/month at regular pricing. Unlimited transactions. No per-deal fees. No surprises.
ListedKit charges $9.99 per transaction intake with bulk discounts: $8.00 each at 10-packs, $7.20 at 25-packs, and $6.60 at 50-packs. No monthly fee. Credits never expire.
What That Looks Like at Different Volumes (Solo TC)
| Monthly Transactions | ListedKit (25-pack rate) | DocJacket ($15/mo early adopter) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | ~$36/mo | $15/mo |
| 10 | ~$72/mo | $15/mo |
| 15 | ~$108/mo | $15/mo |
| 25 | ~$180/mo | $15/mo |
| 40 | ~$288/mo | $15/mo |

For a TC doing 15+ transactions per month — the exact profile of someone ready for dedicated software — DocJacket costs 7x less than ListedKit at bulk rates.
ListedKit’s model works better if your volume is unpredictable or seasonal. You only pay when you use it. But for TCs scaling their business, per-transaction pricing penalizes growth.
Team Pricing
ListedKit lets unlimited team members share one credit pool — no per-seat charge. DocJacket charges per user. For a team of 4 TCs doing 40 transactions/month combined:
| ListedKit (50-pack) | DocJacket ($15/user) | |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly cost | ~$264 | $60 |
| Per-transaction cost | ~$6.60 | ~$1.50 |
Feature Comparison
| Feature | DocJacket | ListedKit |
|---|---|---|
| AI contract reading | 30–45 sec, PDF/JPEG/PNG | Under 60 sec, all formats including handwritten |
| Intake forms | Built-in | Not a standalone feature |
| SMS messaging | Built-in | Not confirmed in AI version |
| Email drafting | AI can drafts with templates and merge fields | AI drafts from natural language prompts |
| Conversational AI | Ask questions about your transaction in plain English | “Ava” — ask questions about your contracts in plain English |
| Workflow memory | Learns from corrections — extraction accuracy improves per state over time | Learns your checklist patterns by state and brokerage over time |
| Client portal | Branded, token-based sharing links | Branded, with built-in referral system |
| Agent portal | Separate portal with full transaction access | Not a separate feature |
| Task management | Deadline tracking, smart reminders, timeline cascade | Auto-generated timelines from contract terms |
| Integrations | Gmail, Outlook, Google Drive, Google Calendar | Gmail, Outlook, Google Calendar |
| Reporting | Transaction reports, Agent scores | Basic dashboard |
| Mobile app | Not yet (web-based) | Not yet (web-based) |
| Free tier | 1 active transaction, 5 AI extractions | 1 free transaction, no credit card |
Where ListedKit Wins
Conversational AI
Both platforms let you ask questions about your transactions in plain English. ListedKit’s version, called Ava, goes a step further — you can tell it things like “Send a congrats email, mention the timeline, spruce it up” and it drafts and sends directly.
DocJacket’s AI chat is focused on transaction questions and contract details. ListedKit’s Ava is more of a general-purpose assistant that handles actions like email drafting and task creation from conversation.

Workflow Memory
Both platforms get smarter over time, but in different ways. ListedKit’s Ava adapts checklists based on the state, brokerage, and your personal preferences — so setup gets faster the more you use it.
DocJacket’s learning is focused on extraction accuracy. Every time you correct an AI-extracted field, that correction feeds back into state-specific skill files and a historical accuracy cache. The system learns which fields it tends to get wrong on Texas contracts vs. California contracts and improves next time. Different approach, same result: less manual work over time.
Low Commitment Entry
No monthly fee means zero risk to try. Process one transaction free, buy credits only when you need them. For TCs testing the waters with new software, this removes friction.
Where DocJacket Wins
Flat-Rate Pricing That Rewards Growth

This is the core philosophical difference. ListedKit’s model charges you more as you grow. DocJacket’s model stays flat. For a TC whose goal is to scale from 15 to 30+ transactions per month, the math isn’t close.
At 25 transactions/month, you’d spend ~$180 on ListedKit credits or $15 on DocJacket. That’s $165/month back in your pocket — nearly $2,000/year.
Built-In SMS
SMS is the communication channel agents actually respond to. DocJacket includes two-way SMS messaging directly from transactions — send deadline reminders, document requests, and status updates without leaving the platform. No separate Twilio account needed.
ListedKit’s AI version doesn’t appear to offer SMS capabilities.
Intake Forms
DocJacket auto-generates branded intake forms for each office. Share a link with your agent, they submit the basics, and AI extracts everything else from the uploaded contract. No more chasing agents for information through email, text, and phone.
This is the exact workflow that TCs currently build with Google Forms + Sheets + scripts — except it’s built in and connected to everything.
Communication Tools Beyond Email
Real estate transactions fail because of communication gaps, not missing checklists. DocJacket is built around this reality with SMS, email templates with merge fields, intake forms, and agent/client portals — all feeding into a single transaction record.
ListedKit focuses primarily on email automation and task management.
Reporting
DocJacket includes production reports, deal velocity tracking, and compliance scoring. ListedKit offers a basic dashboard showing task and document status. If you need to show your agents or broker how your business is performing, DocJacket gives you more to work with.
What Neither Platform Has (Yet)
Both DocJacket and ListedKit are young platforms. Neither offers a native mobile app (both are web-based), a public API, or deep MLS integrations. Neither has e-signatures built in — you’ll still use DocuSign, Dotloop, or your existing e-sign tool alongside either platform.
If you need enterprise-grade integrations with 100+ MLS systems, you’re looking at SkySlope or Dotloop — but you’re also looking at significantly higher costs and complexity.
Who Is Each Platform Built For?
DocJacket is built for independent TCs and small TC teams who handle 15+ transactions per month, want to scale without their software bill scaling with them, and need communication tools (SMS, intake forms, portals) — not just task tracking.
ListedKit is built for TCs and agents who want AI-first simplicity, prefer a conversational interface, and value flexibility in pricing over predictability. It’s also a strong fit for agents managing their own transactions without a dedicated TC.
Try Both — Here’s How
Both platforms offer free tiers, so you can test each with a real transaction before committing.
Try DocJacket free → — 1 active transaction, 5 AI extractions, up to 5 team members. No credit card required.
Try ListedKit free → — 1 free transaction intake. No credit card required.
Upload the same contract to both. See which one extracts more accurately, feels more intuitive, and fits how you actually work.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is DocJacket or ListedKit cheaper?
It depends on volume. For TCs doing 5+ transactions per month, DocJacket is cheaper — often significantly. At 15 transactions/month, DocJacket costs $15 vs. ListedKit’s ~$108. ListedKit is cheaper only if you process 1-2 transactions per month or have highly seasonal volume.
Does ListedKit have SMS?
ListedKit’s original “Classic” version may have had SMS capabilities, but the current AI-powered version does not prominently feature SMS messaging. DocJacket includes built-in two-way SMS.
Can I switch from ListedKit to DocJacket?
Yes. Both platforms work with standard real estate contracts. There’s no data lock-in — you can upload your contracts to DocJacket and have AI extract the details fresh. Your transaction history won’t transfer automatically, but active transactions can be recreated quickly.
Do either of these replace Dotloop or SkySlope?
Not entirely. Dotloop and SkySlope are primarily e-signature and compliance platforms tied to brokerage workflows. DocJacket and ListedKit are transaction coordination platforms — they manage the tasks, communication, and deadlines around those documents. Most TCs use a coordination platform alongside their brokerage’s e-sign tool.
Which has better AI contract reading?
Both read contracts accurately and both let you ask follow-up questions about your transaction in plain English. The key difference is that ListedKit’s Ava also handles actions from conversation — like drafting emails and creating tasks from natural language prompts. DocJacket’s AI chat focuses on transaction intelligence, while its extraction workflow emphasizes a human-approval step — AI extracts, you review and confirm.
Does either have a mobile app?
Neither has a native mobile app as of April 2026. Both are web-based and accessible from mobile browsers.





