I’ve been testing LeazeHub for the past few weeks while managing a 40‑unit portfolio, and overall it’s quickly becoming one of my favorite back‑office tools—though it’s not perfect yet.
What really stands out
End‑to‑end workflow: Listings → e‑sign leases → rent collection → owner reporting all live in one dashboard, so I don’t have to stitch together three different apps.
True “no nickel‑and‑diming” pricing: E‑signatures, late‑fee automation, and unlimited owner/tenant portals are included by default—refreshing after paying add‑ons elsewhere.
Built‑in accounting
Learning curve: The UI feels familiar if you’ve used Quasar‑style interfaces; I was up and running in an afternoon.
Where it still needs polish
Mobile experience: Tenant and vendor screens respond well, but the owner dashboard is cramped on smaller phones.
Integrations: Stripe ACH works great; I’m still waiting on native QuickBooks and Zapier connectors to kill my manual CSV uploads.
Analytics depth: Basic KPIs (occupancy, delinquency) are there, yet deeper insights—cash‑on‑cash, IRR per property—are on the roadmap.
Bottom line
If you’re an independent landlord or boutique PM juggling 10–100 doors, LeazeHub already covers 80 % of the job with sensible pricing and very little setup pain. I’m sticking around, but I’ll be watching for those integration and analytics updates before calling it the all‑in‑one holy grail.