Tag each line covered or not. The covered part bills to the warranty company; the homeowner sees exactly what their contract paid and exactly what they owe — and pays it on the spot. No more lumping, no more flagged claims, no more explaining it twice at the door.
No signup needed — build a branded warranty estimate and email it to your customer, free.
Every line carries a payer flag, and ServiceRig splits the bill automatically at acceptance and again at invoicing.
On the estimate, each line is Covered or the homeowner's share. RigAI can pre-tag the usual code upgrades; you confirm.
Covered lines route to the carrier on their portal and are pulled out of the homeowner's invoice, subtotal, and tax base. Everything else flows to the homeowner.
The homeowner sees a clean value statement — what the warranty paid, what they owe — and pays their share by card on the spot. An all-covered job bills them nothing, on purpose.
Carriers flag invoices when non-covered work is lumped into a vague labor charge. ServiceRig bills each upgrade as its own code-cited line, so every dollar is defensible and the covered portion clears faster.
T&P discharge (IPC 504.6), thermal expansion tank (IPC 607.3), gas sediment trap (IFGC 408.4) — each shows as a separate line with its citation, the way a reviewer wants to see it. Not one mystery "misc labor" charge that gets kicked back.
The homeowner accepts and pays their share at coverage acceptance — before you procure equipment — so you're never floating the customer's portion or chasing it after the truck's gone. The workflow holds procurement until their share is in.
With RigLink open in your browser, dispatches from the major networks turn into ServiceRig customers, jobs, and invoices on their own — then bill the two-payer way above.
Warranty work is a big, underserved revenue stream the general-purpose platforms leave as manual double-entry. It's exactly what ServiceRig was built to make clean. See RigLink →
Free forever — five slots, every feature, warranty billing included. Live in under a day.