On-Screen Takeoff (OST) is a well-known landscaping takeoff tool that a generation of estimators learned on, but that many landscape contractors are now ready to move on from.
On the core manual takeoff job, Bobyard and OST might look similar, but they don’t operate the same way. In this Bobyard vs On-Screen Takeoff comparison, we’ll break down what each tool does, what you’re paying for, and how to figure out which is right for your business.
Table of contents
- Does OST’s Takeoff Boost work for landscape contractors?
- What is Bobyard?
- Bobyard vs. On-Screen Takeoff: 3 factors to help you choose your landscape takeoff solution
- Pricing vs. real ROI
On-Screen Takeoff vs. Bobyard side-by-side comparison
The fastest read on how the two tools stack up:
|
On-Screen Takeoff (OST) |
Bobyard |
|
|---|---|---|
|
Type |
Windows-only desktop takeoff software |
Cloud-based landscape takeoff + estimating platform |
|
AI |
Takeoff Boost (paid add-on, interior trades, run caps) |
Landscape-trained AI, included in base price, unlimited runs |
|
Estimating |
Takeoff only (syncs to Quick Bid or exports to Excel) |
Takeoff + estimating combined in one platform |
|
Platform |
Windows desktop only (no Mac, no browser, no tablet) |
Browser-based (Mac, Windows, tablet, any modern browser) |
|
Pricing |
~$15/user/month + separate Takeoff Boost subscription |
Premium subscription, AI included; flat fee for enterprise |
|
Revisions |
Immediate |
Immediate |
|
Built for |
Every construction trade (MEP, drywall, framing, landscape) |
Landscape specifically (more trades on the way) |
|
Best for |
Solo estimators, multi-trade generalists, low bid volume |
Landscape teams scaling bid volume with multiple estimators |
What is landscape takeoff software?
A landscape takeoff is the process of measuring quantities from a set of construction drawings (e.g., counting plants, measuring hardscape square footage, etc) to drive your estimate amounts, and ultimately your bid.
Many estimators do this by hand, reading through plan sheets and manually counting or measuring. It’s time-consuming, error-prone, and unscalable as bid volume increases.
Landscape takeoff software like Bobyard uses AI trained specifically on landscape construction plans to automate counts, measurements, and calculations from blueprints and drawings, resulting in faster, more accurate takeoffs.
Evaluating other tools? Check out our other comparisons:
What are the pros and cons of On-Screen Takeoff?
What On-Screen Takeoff does well
OST has been around since the late 1990s. Its longevity and familiarity make it a popular option with:
- Overlay feature. Load two versions of a plan and removed items show in red, new items in blue. One of the cleanest visual diffs in takeoff software. (Bobyard has this too.)
- Manual takeoff parity. Familiar and fast if you click through takeoffs by hand.
- Typical Areas and Repeating Pages. Useful for multifamily, hotels, and any project with repeated floor plans.
- Low barrier to try. 14-day free trial, with third-party listings showing pricing around $15 per user per month.
Where it stops working is in the landscape industry, specifically.
Where On-Screen Takeoff falls short for landscape contractors
OST’s biggest gaps show up in the workflow around the core takeoff loop.
- Windows-only, install-required. Native desktop app. No browser, no Mac, no tablet. In 2026, that rules out a lot of modern landscape teams.
- It lags at scale. Capterra reviewers consistently flag slowdowns on large files and count-heavy pages. One noted the problem over 700 count items. Commercial landscape plan sets routinely blow past that number. Bobyard’s cloud-based, AI-first architecture is built for the plan sets mid-market and enterprise landscape contractors actually run.
- No preloaded item libraries. Every condition, item, and assembly gets built from scratch or bought from a third party.
- It’s takeoff only. OST measures. It doesn’t estimate. To turn quantities into a bid, you’re exporting to Excel or syncing with Quick Bid. Two tools, two workflows.
- Generalist across trades. OST’s roadmap covers MEP, drywall, flooring, framing, and landscape all at once. Trade-specific tools can go deeper on the workflows that actually matter to each trade.
Does OST’s Takeoff Boost work for landscape contractors?
ConstructConnect launched Takeoff Boost in 2023 as OST’s AI layer.
What OST Takeoff Boost does
The AI was trained on floor plans for interior building work. It scans plans to give area, linear, and count measurements, primarily for walls, ceilings, floor areas, and interior counts.
Who OST Takeoff Boost was built for
General contractors and interior subs; trades like walls, ceilings, and plumbing.
Where OST Takeoff Boost falls short for landscape
- No plant symbol detection trained on landscape legends
- No auto-line detection for irrigation runs or hardscape edges
- No area classification for landscape surfaces (turf, mulch, planting zones)
- No aerial imagery takeoff, critical for maintenance bids
Critically, Takeoff Boost doesn’t run on site plans, which is what most landscape work actually lives on.
How OST Takeoff Boost is priced
Separate subscription on top of OST, separate license key, with run caps unless you’re on Premium Maintenance Plan. The AI was bolted on in 2023 and sold as an upgrade.
Bottom line: Takeoff Boost is a real AI product for interior building work. On a landscape plan set, it wasn’t built for your drawings.
What Is Bobyard?
Bobyard is AI takeoff and estimating software first built specifically for landscape contractors, and now expanding to more trades. Developed with computer vision and high-powered AI trained specifically on landscape construction across thousands of real landscape plan sets, Bobyard allows you to upload construction drawings to automatically extract quantities: plants, hardscape, irrigation, linear measurements, and more. Your estimators stay in control of the process, but with little manual intervention.
Key Bobyard features for landscape estimators include
- Estimate tables to organize quantities into a clean table to price and export
- Material-centric takeoffs where quantities stay connected to pricing
- Aerial takeoffs that generate surface-area measurements from aerial/satellite imagery
- Spec & RFI chatbot to get instant answers to project questions or RFIs
- Instant search, detection, and counting: symbols, polygons, and hatch patterns
- Text callouts and annotations can also be factored into calculations and counts
- One-click generator area, perimeter, volume, and related quantities
- Confidence scores provided for results so estimators know where to focus attention
- Easy navigation through complex plan sets with search and project structures that match workflow phases
- Priced by seats, not on a project or output basis
Bobyard vs. On-Screen Takeoff: 3 factors to help you choose your landscape takeoff solution
OST represents where takeoff software started, but Bobyard represents where landscape estimating is going. Three structural differences drive the difference.
1. Bobyard's landscape-trained AI vs. On-Screen Takeoff's AI built for interior trades
Bobyard’s AI is trained on thousands of landscape plans — plant legends, irrigation runs, hardscape edges, turf zones, planting beds. It also runs on aerial imagery for maintenance takeoffs, which is most of the landscape industry’s recurring revenue. OST’s Takeoff Boost is trained on floor plans and runs on walls, ceilings, and floor areas. Same category of feature, completely different drawings underneath.
2. Bobyard's one platform vs. On-Screen Takeoff's stack of tools
Bobyard handles takeoff, estimating, AI quantities, bulk material upload, and a plan-set chatbot inside a single browser-based platform. OST is takeoff only — quantities still need to move into Quick Bid, Excel, or another estimating tool, with Takeoff Boost as a separate AI subscription. Fewer licenses, fewer logins, fewer sync points.
3. Bobyard's cloud-native tool vs. On-Screen Takeoff's Windows desktop app
Bobyard runs in any modern browser, on any device. Mac, Windows, tablet, in the office or on a job site. OST is a Windows-only desktop install. That difference compounds the moment you have more than one estimator, anyone on a Mac, or anyone working outside a corporate desktop setup.
“This is literally the future of estimating in landscaping, and it’s time to get on board.” — John Barrett, Chopper Landscaping
Bobyard vs. On-Screen Takeoff pricing vs. real ROI
OST’s public starting price is around $15 per user per month, with Takeoff Boost as a separate subscription on top. Bobyard is a premium subscription priced for serious commercial bid volume, and is more expensive than OST's per-seat cost, with AI included, unlimited runs, and no separate license keys.
The per-seat number isn’t the comparison that matters. Here's how Bobyard customers justify the price.
1. More estimates, faster, drives business growth
Mid-market landscape contractors don’t lose work because they can’t build it. They lose work because they can’t bid it fast enough. Faster turnaround means responding to more RFPs, getting in front of GCs and developers earlier, and pursuing opportunities that used to get passed on because estimating capacity was full. Every bid not submitted is revenue left on the table.
2. More efficient estimators can do more with less
Bobyard customers consistently report 50–70% time savings on takeoff work. Some report 80-90%. Flip that into a budget-meeting question: what would you pay to make each estimator 50% more efficient?
A typical landscape estimator earns around $70,000 a year, all-in. Ten percent of that is $7,000 per estimator. For a three-estimator team, $21,000 a year for a 50% productivity gain. Compare that to hiring a fourth estimator: another $70–90K, plus benefits, recruiting, and six months of ramp. Bobyard is the cheaper capacity move.
3. The cost per bid doesn’t change at scale
A landscape team bidding 70 jobs a month on a manual tool can push that to 140 on Bobyard without adding an estimator, a pattern we’ve seen repeatedly with mid-market customers. Double the bids, same team. Even at a flat close rate, that’s double the revenue pipeline against a subscription delta that disappears inside a single won project.
4. You don’t need separate tools for each step
An OST workflow isn’t one subscription; it’s a stack. OST for measuring, Takeoff Boost as an add-on for AI, Quick Bid or Excel for actually building the bid. Each piece is a separate license, a separate workflow, and another set of training hours. Bobyard collapses that stack into one platform: takeoff, estimating, AI quantities, and material lists in the same place. The real cost of a multi-tool setup is rarely just the line items.
When On-Screen Takeoff is the better choice
OST genuinely wins for some profiles:
- Single estimator or very small team with low bid volume
- Existing OST workflow that works, no appetite to rebuild
- Bidding across multiple trades (MEP, drywall, landscape) and need one generalist tool
- Upfront monthly cost as your single biggest constraint
If that’s you, OST is a solid pick.
When Bobyard is the better choice
Bobyard’s math works for landscape contractors where bid volume and team efficiency matter more than per-seat cost:
- $5M–$100M+ annual revenue, with at least one full-time estimator
- Commercial or new-construction bid-build pipeline, or a heavy maintenance book that runs on aerial imagery
- Owner or chief estimator is the bottleneck & every big bid runs through them
- Multi-branch operation that needs consistent takeoff quantities across estimators
- A team comfortable working in modern, browser-based tools (Mac, tablet, multiple users)
If estimating capacity is what’s capping how many bids the team can put out, Bobyard is the cheaper way to scale than another headcount.
Ready to see Bobyard on your own drawings?
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Frequently asked questions
Is Bobyard a replacement for On-Screen Takeoff?
For landscape contractors, yes. Bobyard does everything OST does for manual takeoff (lines, areas, counts, overlays, symbols), plus landscape-trained AI and estimating in one cloud platform.
Can I use Bobyard on a Mac?
Yes. Bobyard is fully browser-based. OST is Windows-only desktop software.
How is Bobyard’s AI different from OST’s Takeoff Boost?
Takeoff Boost is trained on interior building drawings: walls, ceilings, floor areas. Bobyard’s AI is trained on landscape drawings and also handles aerial imagery for maintenance takeoffs.
Can I migrate my existing OST takeoffs into Bobyard?
We recommend starting new projects in Bobyard rather than backfilling OST files. Onboarding can help run Bobyard’s AI on previous jobs to benchmark output.
What if I’m also comparing AI-only tools or outsourced services?
See our comparisons of Bobyard vs Beam AI and Bobyard vs Takeoff Monkey.