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United Kingdom edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-19

Top 10 Workforce Management Software in the United Kingdom for 2026

Independent UK WFM ranking, GBP pricing, Working Time Regulations 1998, National Minimum Wage, UK GDPR, and retail and hospitality champion reality.

United Kingdom verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-19

The UK WFM market is led by Deputy and Quinyx for retail and hospitality, with Planday (Xero-owned) as the SMB and mid-market alternative. UKG Ready has a UK presence through legacy Kronos customers. 7shifts is used by UK restaurant groups that also operate in the US. The UK compliance regime is anchored on the Working Time Regulations 1998 (48-hour average working week opt-out, 11-hour rest, 24-hour weekly rest, 20-minute break after 6 hours, 4-week paid holiday), the National Minimum Wage (NMW) and National Living Wage (NLW) uprated annually each April by HMRC, and UK GDPR for employee scheduling and biometric data. The 2026 UK-specific development is the Employment Rights Bill (in parliamentary progress as of 2026), which introduces provisions on predictable working hours, right to request a stable hours contract, and enhanced protection for zero-hours-contract workers. Deputy and Quinyx are the two platforms with the most mature UK retail and hospitality customer bases. New Look, Holland and Barrett, and similar UK retail chains are documented Deputy and Quinyx customers. Planday is the Xero-anchored SMB pick for UK hospitality, cafes, and small retail.

Picks for United Kingdom

  • UK retail and hospitality mid-market (50-2,000 employees): Deputy Modern WFM leader for UK retail, hospitality, and healthcare. Strong UK payroll integrations (Xero, Sage, ADP UK, BrightPay). Working Time Regulations 1998 compliance toolkit built in. UK GDPR data residency available.
  • UK retail with European multi-country operations: Quinyx Stockholm-built WFM with strong UK and DACH retail and hospitality footprint. Best for UK retailers operating across UK, Germany, Sweden, and other EU markets. AI-driven labor forecasting. UK GDPR compliant.
  • UK SMB hospitality and retail on Xero (under 200 employees): Planday Xero-owned since 2021. Strongest fit when the customer is already on Xero accounting; native Xero integration simplifies payroll. Used by UK cafes, independent retail, and SMB hospitality groups.
  • UK restaurants and food service: 7shifts Growing UK restaurant adoption. POS integrations with UK-used systems (Lightspeed, Square UK, Epos Now). Labour cost vs. sales reporting relevant for UK hospitality thin-margin operators.
Market context

How the workforce management market looks in United Kingdom

The UK WFM market is concentrated in retail and hospitality, driven by the same scheduling complexity that shapes the US market but under a different regulatory framework. Deputy and Quinyx are the two most-referenced platforms among UK retail and hospitality operators of scale. Deputy's UK customer base includes New Look (fashion retail), Holland and Barrett (health retail), and similar omnichannel retail chains. Quinyx's UK customers include Co-op Food, Boots (Walgreens subsidiary), and select healthcare and services operators. Planday is the SMB hospitality default for UK operators already on Xero accounting.

The UK Employment Rights Bill (in parliamentary progress as of 2026) is the most significant UK WFM regulatory development since the Working Time Regulations 1998. Key provisions expected to affect WFM platform requirements: (1) right to request a predictable working pattern (employers must respond within 1 month, refusal requires a business reason); (2) zero-hours-contract workers gaining rights to guaranteed hours if they work regular hours over a defined period; (3) day-one unfair dismissal rights (removing the 2-year qualifying period). WFM platforms that can surface hours-worked patterns to support predictable-hours-contract assessments, and that generate shift-offer audit trails for zero-hours workers, will have a compliance advantage. Deputy and Quinyx are building toward this; Planday and When I Work have thinner compliance toolkits for the new provisions.

UK payroll integration is a critical selection factor: HMRC Real Time Information (RTI) submission requirements mean WFM attendance data must feed payroll cleanly. Deputy integrates with Xero Payroll, Sage Payroll, ADP UK, and BrightPay; Quinyx integrates with Sage and ADP UK; Planday integrates natively with Xero Payroll. National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage (uprated April 2026: NLW £11.44/hour for 21+ workers, apprentice rate revised) must be enforced in time and attendance outputs; all platforms in this ranking handle NMW rate enforcement at schedule level.

Compliance & local rules

Working Time Regulations 1998: 48-hour average working week (opt-out available, must be voluntary and in writing), 11-hour consecutive rest between working days, 24-hour weekly rest (or 48 hours fortnightly), 20-minute unpaid rest break after 6 hours, 4-week (rising to 5.6 weeks including bank holidays) paid annual leave. WTR breaches create Employment Tribunal exposure; WFM platforms must track weekly average hours across reference periods. National Minimum Wage: HMRC uprates annually each April; WFM platforms must enforce NMW floor at scheduling and time-and-attendance stage; underpayment (including for travel time and sleep-in shifts in care settings) creates HMRC enforcement risk. UK GDPR (UK Data Protection Act 2018, operationally distinct from EU GDPR post-Brexit): employee attendance and biometric data is personal data; ICO guidance on employee monitoring applies; vendors must support UK-resident data residency or clearly disclose data transfer safeguards. Employment Rights Bill (2026, in progress): right to request predictable working pattern, zero-hours-contract hours-guarantee rights, day-one unfair dismissal rights; WFM platforms should build audit trails for hours patterns and shift-offer records. Agency Workers Regulations 2010: agency and zero-hours workers have rights to same basic conditions as direct employees after 12 weeks; WFM platforms managing mixed direct and agency workforces must track agency tenure. Holiday pay computation for irregular-hours workers (post-Harpur Trust v Brazel, Supreme Court 2022, now superseded by Employment Relations (Flexible Working) Act provisions): 52-week average holiday pay calculation; WFM platforms tracking irregular hours must support the correct holiday pay computation method.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for United Kingdom

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Deputy
SMB and mid-market hourly workforces in retail, hospitality, healthcare, and services
$4.5/emp $45 4.6 Global; strongest in US, AU, UK, NZ, CA
10 Quinyx
European retail and hospitality with multi-country deployments
Quote - 4.4 Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, UK, Germany, Netherlands, France; lighter US, AU
8 Planday
SMB hourly workforces in UK, AU, NZ, EU running Xero
$2.99/emp $29.900000000000002 4.3 UK, AU, NZ, EU; lighter US presence
2 When I Work
SMB hourly workforces across restaurants, retail, healthcare, services
$2.5/emp $25 4.4 Global; strongest in US, CA, AU, UK
3 UKG Ready
SMB and mid-market hourly workforces across retail, hospitality, healthcare, manufacturing, public sector
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in US, CA, UK, AU
4 Humanity
Mid-market hourly workforces in healthcare, retail, hospitality, services
$3/emp $30 4.3 Global; strongest in US, CA, UK
5 Shiftboard
Industrial, healthcare, public-safety workforces with 24x7 operations
Quote - 4.3 Global; strongest in US, CA
7 7shifts
Independent restaurants and small chains (1-50 locations)
$0 $0 4.5 US, CA, AU, UK
6 Homebase
SMB hourly businesses, single or small multi-location
$0 $0 4.3 US, CA
9 Legion
Enterprise retail and hospitality orgs operationalising AI labor forecasting
Quote - 4.6 US, CA; lighter EU presence

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in United Kingdom actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in GBP. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (GBP) Sample Notes
Deputy 50-200 employees £4,200 78 Premium tier; GBP-billed; per-employee per-month
Deputy 200-1,000 employees £17,000 54 Premium tier; GBP; UK enterprise
Quinyx 100-1,000 employees £22,000 41 Enterprise tier; GBP equivalent; negotiated
Planday 10-100 employees £2,400 88 Plus tier; GBP; Xero-bundled pricing available
When I Work 20-100 employees £2,160 62 Scheduling + Attendance; GBP equivalent; USD pricing
UKG Ready 200-2,000 employees £26,000 28 UK enterprise; GBP equivalent; USD pricing via UK channel
Local challengers

United Kingdom-built or United Kingdom-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for United Kingdom buyers and worth a shortlist.

Quinyx

Visit ↗

Stockholm-built WFM with strong UK and DACH retail and hospitality footprint. UK customers include Co-op Food, Boots, and NHS-aligned healthcare operators. AI-driven labor forecasting. Multi-country capability covers UK, Sweden, Germany, Denmark, and Netherlands in a single deployment. UK GDPR compliant, EU data residency available. The strongest choice for UK retailers with European operations.

Planday

Visit ↗

Copenhagen-built, Xero-owned since 2021. UK SMB and mid-market WFM for hospitality, retail, and services. Native Xero Payroll integration is the differentiator. ~4,000 UK customers. GBP-priced. Working Time Regulations 1998 compliance built in. Best when customer is on Xero accounting.

Rotaready

Visit ↗

London-built UK WFM for hospitality, retail, and leisure. Native integration with UK payroll providers (Sage, Xero, Fourth Hospitality). Used by UK hotel groups, pub chains, and leisure operators. Strong Fourth Hospitality integration for UK hospitality.

Fourth (now HotSchedules + Fourth)

Visit ↗

London-headquartered WFM and HR platform dominant in UK hospitality (pubs, restaurants, hotels, contract catering). Fourth covers scheduling, time and attendance, and HR for UK hospitality at scale. Used by Mitchells and Butlers, Greene King-tier UK pub and restaurant groups.

The United Kingdom ranking

All 10, ranked for United Kingdom

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the United Kingdom market.

#1

Deputy

Modern hourly workforce management leader for SMB and mid-market.

Founded 2008 · Sydney, Australia · private · 50-2,000 employees
G2 4.6 (2,840)
Capterra 4.7
From $4.5 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Deputy

Deputy is the modern leader in hourly workforce management for SMB and mid-market, founded 2008 in Sydney by Steve Shelley and Ashik Ahmed. The product covers scheduling, time and attendance with biometric and PIN clock-in, labor forecasting against sales, predictive scheduling compliance, leave management, and a strong mobile-first execution layer. Deputy raised a 300-million-dollar-plus Series B in 2018 led by IVP and OpenView; the round predates the 2022-2024 valuation reset and the company has stayed largely heads-down on product execution since, with valuation widely reported as flat rather than marked up. Strengths: cleanest mobile-first scheduling and time-and-attendance UX in the mid-market band, mature 17-year track record, deep predictive scheduling compliance for NYC, Seattle, San Francisco, Oregon, Chicago, and Philadelphia fair-workweek laws, broad payroll integrations (ADP, Gusto, Rippling, Xero, QuickBooks, Paychex), and labor-cost-vs-sales forecasting that holds up at 50-2,000 employee scale. Best fit for retail, hospitality, healthcare, and services orgs (50-2,000 employees) with hourly workforces and active scheduling complexity. Trade-offs: per-employee pricing scales meaningfully past 500 employees, AI labor forecasting trails Legion and Quinyx for true demand-based optimization, and the European footprint is lighter than Quinyx for multi-country deployments.

Best for

Retail, hospitality, healthcare, and services organisations (50-2,000 employees) with hourly workforces, active scheduling complexity, and predictive-scheduling-law exposure.

Worst for

Restaurant-only operators wanting deep POS integration (7shifts is purpose-built), enterprise retail wanting AI-first labor forecasting (Legion stronger), or European multi-country deployments (Quinyx better fit).

Strengths

  • Cleanest mobile-first scheduling UX in the mid-market band
  • Mature 17-year track record with founder still as CEO
  • Deep predictive scheduling compliance (NYC, Seattle, SF, Oregon, Chicago, Philadelphia)
  • Broad payroll integrations (ADP, Gusto, Rippling, Xero, QuickBooks, Paychex)
  • Labor-cost-vs-sales forecasting holds up at scale
  • Strong biometric and PIN clock-in with photo verification
  • Native shift swap and open-shift-claim flows

Weaknesses

  • Per-employee pricing scales meaningfully past 500 employees
  • AI labor forecasting trails Legion and Quinyx
  • European footprint lighter than Quinyx for multi-country
  • Reporting customisation limited at standard tier
  • Some advanced compliance gated to Enterprise tier

Pricing tiers

public
  • Scheduling
    Per active employee per month; scheduling, leave, news feed, basic reporting
    $4.5 /emp/mo
  • Time and Attendance
    Per active employee per month; clock-in, timesheets, payroll export
    $4.5 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per active employee per month; both modules plus labor forecasting, advanced reporting
    $6 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, dedicated CSM, advanced compliance, API limits raised
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised price
  • · Premium tier required for labor forecasting
  • · SSO gated to Enterprise
  • · POS integration depth varies by partner

Key features

  • +Mobile-first scheduling (web, iOS, Android)
  • +Time and attendance with biometric, PIN, and photo verification
  • +Labor forecasting against sales or footfall
  • +Predictive scheduling compliance toolkit
  • +Shift swap and open-shift-claim
  • +Leave management
  • +News feed and team comms
  • +Payroll export to 30-plus systems
50+ integrations
ADPGustoRipplingXeroQuickBooks OnlinePaychexSquareToastLightspeedBambooHRMicrosoft TeamsSlack
Geography
Global; strongest in US, AU, UK, NZ, CA
#10

Quinyx

AI-driven workforce management for European retail and hospitality.

Founded 2005 · Stockholm, Sweden · private · 200-50,000 employees
G2 4.4 (380)
Capterra 4.5
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Quinyx

Quinyx is the European AI-driven workforce management leader, founded 2005 in Stockholm by Erik Fjellborg (after a stint as a McDonald's shift manager prompted the original problem statement). The product covers scheduling, time and attendance, AI-driven labor forecasting, communication, and predictive scheduling compliance with strong European retail and hospitality footprint, Quinyx serves IKEA, McDonald's Europe, GANT, and other major European retailers. Strengths: strongest European footprint of any AI-driven WFM vendor, Quinyx is meaningfully present across Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, UK, Germany, Netherlands, and France with native handling of country-specific labor law (collective agreements, working time directives, country-specific overtime rules), mature 20-year track record, founder-led culture, strong AI labor forecasting (Quinyx Forecast), and broad European payroll integrations. Best fit for European retail and hospitality orgs (200-50,000 employees) with multi-country deployments and country-specific labor law complexity. Trade-offs: US presence is meaningfully lighter than Deputy or Legion (US customer base exists but is concentrated and the implementation partner network is thinner), pricing is opaque, mid-market US buyers will find Deputy a cleaner fit, and the product UX has a European sensibility that reads less polished to US buyers used to Deputy or When I Work.

Best for

European retail and hospitality orgs (200-50,000 employees) with multi-country deployments and country-specific labor law complexity.

Worst for

US-anchored buyers (Deputy or Legion better fit), SMB buyers (When I Work or Homebase simpler), or buyers wanting US-first implementation partner network.

Strengths

  • Strongest European footprint of any AI-driven WFM vendor
  • Native handling of country-specific labor law across Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, UK, Germany, Netherlands, France
  • Mature 20-year track record
  • Founder-led culture
  • Strong AI labor forecasting (Quinyx Forecast)
  • Broad European payroll integrations
  • Customer base includes IKEA, McDonald's Europe, GANT

Weaknesses

  • US presence meaningfully lighter than Deputy or Legion
  • Implementation partner network thinner in US
  • Pricing opaque
  • European product UX reads less polished to US buyers
  • Mid-market US buyers find Deputy cleaner fit

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Schedule
    Per employee per month custom quote; scheduling, communication
    Quote
  • Schedule plus Time
    Adds time and attendance
    Quote
  • Workforce Management
    Full suite plus AI labor forecasting (Quinyx Forecast)
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Custom; advanced compliance, multi-country deployments, dedicated CSM
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services typically required for multi-country deployments
  • · Country-specific compliance modules priced separately
  • · Annual price increases per customer reports

Key features

  • +Scheduling
  • +Time and attendance
  • +AI-driven labor forecasting (Quinyx Forecast)
  • +Communication and team messaging
  • +Predictive scheduling compliance
  • +Country-specific labor law handling
  • +European payroll integrations
35+ integrations
WorkdaySAP SuccessFactorsOracle HCMADPCGIVismaHogiaPersonioMicrosoft Teams
Geography
Sweden, Norway, Finland, Denmark, UK, Germany, Netherlands, France; lighter US, AU
#8

Planday

Xero-anchored scheduling for SMB.

Founded 2004 · Copenhagen, Denmark · public · 5-200 employees
G2 4.3 (380)
Capterra 4.4
From $2.99 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Planday

Planday is the Xero-anchored SMB scheduling platform, founded 2004 in Copenhagen and acquired by Xero in 2021 for approximately 200 million dollars-plus to anchor Xero's payroll-and-people strategy in Europe and Australia. The product covers scheduling, time and attendance, leave management, communication, and a tightly-integrated payroll export to Xero Payroll across UK, AU, NZ, and select EU markets. Strengths: tightest Xero integration in the category, for Xero customers, Planday is functionally the default scheduling layer with a single-vendor billing relationship, strong fit for European and Australasian SMB hourly workforces (5-200 employees), mature 21-year track record (predating the Xero acquisition by 17 years), and clean modern UX. Best fit for SMB hourly workforces (5-200 employees) already running Xero accounting and payroll, restaurants, retail, hospitality, services across UK, AU, NZ, EU. Trade-offs: weaker fit for non-Xero customers given the acquisition has tilted product priority toward Xero-anchored use cases, US footprint is limited (Xero itself is weaker in the US), broader integration ecosystem narrower than Deputy, and AI labor forecasting absent.

Best for

SMB hourly workforces (5-200 employees) already running Xero accounting and payroll, restaurants, retail, hospitality, services across UK, AU, NZ, EU.

Worst for

Non-Xero customers (Deputy or When I Work better generalist fit), US-anchored buyers (Deputy and Homebase stronger), or buyers needing AI-first labor forecasting (Legion or Quinyx stronger).

Strengths

  • Tightest Xero integration in the category
  • Right call for European and Australasian SMB hourly workforces
  • Mature 21-year track record predating Xero acquisition
  • Clean modern UX
  • Single-vendor billing for Xero customers
  • Strong leave management with European compliance specifics

Weaknesses

  • Weaker fit for non-Xero customers post-acquisition
  • US footprint limited (Xero weaker in US)
  • Integration ecosystem narrower than Deputy
  • AI labor forecasting absent
  • Mid-market depth lighter than Deputy or UKG Ready

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Per employee per month; basic scheduling and communication
    $2.99 /emp/mo
  • Plus
    Per employee per month; time and attendance, payroll integration, advanced scheduling
    $4.99 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per employee per month; advanced reporting, API, custom permissions
    $6.99 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, dedicated CSM, complex integrations
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for discount
  • · API access gated to Pro tier
  • · SSO gated to Enterprise
  • · Currency varies by region (GBP, EUR, AUD, NZD, USD)

Key features

  • +Scheduling
  • +Time and attendance
  • +Leave management with European compliance specifics
  • +Communication and team messaging
  • +Xero Payroll integration
  • +Reporting
25+ integrations
XeroXero Payroll (UK/AU/NZ)QuickBooks OnlineMicrosoft TeamsSlackBambooHR
Geography
UK, AU, NZ, EU; lighter US presence
#2

When I Work

SMB scheduling leader with profitable-without-VC execution discipline.

Founded 2010 · Minneapolis, MN · private · 5-200 employees
G2 4.4 (2,180)
Capterra 4.5
From $2.5 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit When I Work

When I Work is the SMB scheduling leader, founded 2010 in Minneapolis by Chad Halvorson. The product covers scheduling, time and attendance with mobile clock-in, team messaging, shift swap, and basic labor reporting at a transparent per-user price. The company has been notably public about being profitable and choosing not to raise additional growth capital, the most recent meaningful round was an 80-million-dollar growth investment from Bain Capital Ventures in 2018, and management has repeatedly stated since that growth is funded from cash flow. Strengths: cleanest SMB scheduling UX, transparent per-user pricing without per-feature gating, mobile-first execution that genuinely works for hourly teams, profitable-without-VC discipline that shows in product stability and roadmap consistency, and strong fit for under-200-employee hourly businesses. Best fit for SMB hourly workforces (5-200 employees), restaurants, retail, healthcare, services, that need solid scheduling and time tracking without the mid-market complexity. Trade-offs: labor forecasting is lighter than Deputy and meaningfully lighter than Legion or Quinyx, predictive scheduling compliance toolkit is functional but not as deep as Deputy, and the platform deliberately stays out of the 1,000-plus employee mid-market band where Deputy and UKG Ready compete.

Best for

SMB hourly workforces (5-200 employees), restaurants, retail, healthcare, services, needing solid scheduling and time tracking without mid-market complexity.

Worst for

Mid-market and enterprise (Deputy and UKG Ready stronger), restaurant operators wanting deep POS integration (7shifts purpose-built), or AI-first labor forecasting buyers (Legion and Quinyx stronger).

Strengths

  • Cleanest SMB scheduling UX in the category
  • Transparent per-user pricing without per-feature gating
  • Profitable-without-VC discipline shows in product stability
  • Mobile-first execution genuinely works for hourly teams
  • Strong shift swap and open-shift-claim flows
  • Founder-led for 15 years
  • Reasonable payroll integrations (Gusto, ADP, QuickBooks, Square)

Weaknesses

  • Labor forecasting lighter than Deputy and much lighter than Legion or Quinyx
  • Predictive scheduling compliance functional but not deep
  • Deliberately stays out of 1,000-plus employee mid-market band
  • Reporting depth below mid-market peers
  • Limited European footprint

Pricing tiers

public
  • Essentials
    Per user per month; scheduling, time clock, team messaging
    $2.5 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user per month; labor reporting, schedule templates, payroll export
    $6 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per user per month; advanced labor forecasting, custom permissions, API access
    $8 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised price
  • · Some payroll integrations require Pro tier or higher
  • · API access gated to Premium

Key features

  • +Mobile-first scheduling
  • +Time clock with GPS and photo verification
  • +Team messaging
  • +Shift swap and open-shift-claim
  • +Labor reporting (Pro and above)
  • +Schedule templates
  • +Payroll export
30+ integrations
GustoADPQuickBooksSquareToastCloverXeroBambooHRSlack
Geography
Global; strongest in US, CA, AU, UK
#3

UKG Ready

Mature SMB and mid-market UKG offering, distinct from UKG Pro enterprise HRIS.

Founded 1977 · Lowell, MA and Weston, FL · pe backed · 50-2,000 employees
G2 4.0 (1,480)
Capterra 4.2
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit UKG Ready

UKG Ready is the SMB and mid-market workforce management offering from UKG, distinct from UKG Pro which is the enterprise HRIS covered in our HRIS ranking. UKG Ready was originally branded Kronos Workforce Ready before the 2020 Kronos plus Ultimate Software merger that created UKG; the codebase predates the merger by more than a decade. UKG itself is owned by Hellman and Friedman plus Blackstone in a private-equity ownership structure that traces to the 2007 Kronos take-private and the subsequent 2018 Hellman and Friedman recapitalization plus 2020 merger. The product covers scheduling, time and attendance with industry-leading legacy depth, leave management, basic labor forecasting, talent management modules, and a payroll module that competes head-on with Gusto, ADP, and Paychex in the SMB band. Strengths: deepest legacy time-and-attendance compliance in the category, the Kronos heritage shows in handling of complex break, overtime, premium-pay, and union-rule scenarios that newer tools fumble, strong scheduling and predictive scheduling compliance, mature SMB and mid-market fit, and an integrated payroll module. Best fit for SMB and mid-market hourly workforces (50-2,000 employees) wanting the most mature legacy compliance handling. Trade-offs and the editorial caveat: the PE-pressure pattern at the parent under Hellman and Friedman plus Blackstone is documented across customer reviews, support-quality reports, and pricing posture. The 2021 ransomware incident affecting Kronos Private Cloud is a real point of post-incident behavior history, the response was widely criticised and led to regulatory and class-action exposure. Buyers should treat UKG Ready as a competent product whose vendor parent is operating under PE-pressure dynamics that affect support, pricing posture, and roadmap discipline.

Best for

SMB and mid-market hourly workforces (50-2,000 employees) prioritizing the most mature legacy compliance handling and willing to accept the implementation and parent-PE trade-offs.

Worst for

SMB buyers wanting modern UX and transparent pricing (Deputy and When I Work cleaner), enterprise buyers needing 5,000-plus employee scale (UKG Pro or Workday WFM stronger), or buyers sensitive to PE-pressure patterns in vendor behavior.

Strengths

  • Deepest legacy time-and-attendance compliance in the category
  • Mature handling of complex break, overtime, premium-pay, union-rule scenarios
  • Integrated payroll module competes with Gusto and ADP in SMB band
  • Strong predictive scheduling compliance toolkit
  • Mature SMB and mid-market fit (50-2,000 employees)
  • Broad HR module breadth (talent, recruiting, performance available)

Weaknesses

  • PE-pressure pattern at parent (Hellman and Friedman plus Blackstone) documented across review corpus
  • 2021 Kronos Private Cloud ransomware incident response widely criticised
  • Implementation complexity higher than Deputy or When I Work
  • Pricing opaque (call-for-quote at most tiers)
  • Support quality variable post-merger
  • UI dated relative to modern SMB peers

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Time and Attendance
    Approximate per employee per month; quote-based, varies by volume and contract length
    $8 /emp/mo
  • Workforce Management
    Approximate; adds scheduling, leave, and forecasting modules
    $14 /emp/mo
  • HR plus Payroll plus WFM
    Approximate; full SMB suite including payroll and HR modules
    $22 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise (1,000-plus employees)
    Custom; volume pricing, dedicated CSM, advanced compliance
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation fees commonly 15-30 percent of first-year contract
  • · Annual price increases consistently above category average per customer reports
  • · Module add-ons priced separately
  • · Long contracts (3-5 years) common with auto-renewal language buyers should review

Key features

  • +Scheduling with complex shift logic
  • +Time and attendance with deep legacy compliance
  • +Labor forecasting (basic)
  • +Predictive scheduling compliance toolkit
  • +Integrated payroll module
  • +Leave management
  • +Talent management add-ons
  • +Reporting and analytics
80+ integrations
ADPWorkdaySAP SuccessFactorsNetSuiteMicrosoft DynamicsSalesforceBambooHRGreenhouse
Geography
Global; strongest in US, CA, UK, AU
#4

Humanity

Long-running scheduling platform under TCP Software ownership.

Founded 2010 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.3 (480)
Capterra 4.3
From $3 /employee/mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Humanity

Humanity is the long-running scheduling platform, founded 2010 in San Francisco and acquired by TCP Software in 2020. TCP Software is the parent of TimeClock Plus and several other workforce-time products and is itself owned by Providence Equity Partners. The Humanity product covers scheduling with complex shift logic, time and attendance via integration with TCP TimeClock Plus or third-party time systems, leave management, and basic labor reporting. Strengths: mature 15-year track record, strong handling of complex multi-location and multi-role shift logic, decent mid-market fit, and post-acquisition stability that has avoided the worst PE-pressure patterns seen at larger peers. Best fit for mid-market hourly workforces (50-1,000 employees), healthcare, retail, hospitality, services, that need solid scheduling but do not need the integrated payroll or AI-first labor forecasting of newer entrants. Trade-offs: time and attendance is integration-dependent rather than native, broader workforce management depth lighter than Deputy, AI labor forecasting absent, and the post-2020 product velocity has slowed relative to the pre-acquisition pace.

Best for

Mid-market hourly workforces (50-1,000 employees), healthcare, retail, hospitality, services, needing solid scheduling without integrated payroll or AI labor forecasting.

Worst for

SMB buyers wanting modern UX and transparent pricing (When I Work cleaner), buyers needing AI-first labor forecasting (Legion or Quinyx stronger), or buyers wanting an integrated payroll module (UKG Ready or Homebase fit better).

Strengths

  • Mature 15-year track record
  • Strong handling of complex multi-location and multi-role shift logic
  • Decent mid-market fit (50-1,000 employees)
  • Post-acquisition stability under TCP Software
  • Avoids worst PE-pressure patterns of larger peers
  • Solid leave management

Weaknesses

  • Time and attendance integration-dependent rather than native
  • Broader workforce management depth lighter than Deputy
  • AI labor forecasting absent
  • Post-2020 product velocity slowed
  • UI dated relative to modern peers
  • Pricing opaque

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Starter
    Per user per month; basic scheduling and time-off
    $3 /emp/mo
  • Classic
    Per user per month; full scheduling, shift swap, reporting
    $4 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; complex shift rules, SSO, integration depth, dedicated CSM
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised price
  • · Time-and-attendance integration may require TCP TimeClock Plus or third-party tool
  • · Enterprise tier required for SSO and advanced compliance

Key features

  • +Scheduling with complex shift logic
  • +Multi-location and multi-role support
  • +Shift swap and open-shift-claim
  • +Leave management
  • +Time-off requests and approvals
  • +Reporting (basic)
  • +Time-and-attendance via integration
30+ integrations
TCP TimeClock PlusADPGustoBambooHRWorkdaySAP SuccessFactorsSlackMicrosoft Teams
Geography
Global; strongest in US, CA, UK
#5

Shiftboard

Industrial and healthcare workforce orchestration with deep complex-shift logic.

Founded 2008 · Seattle, WA · private · 200-5,000 employees
G2 4.3 (280)
Capterra 4.4
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Shiftboard

Shiftboard is the industrial and healthcare workforce orchestration platform, founded 2008 in Seattle. The product is purpose-built for 24x7 operations with complex shift logic, manufacturing, healthcare, public safety, energy, and other industries where shifts are not interchangeable, credentials are required, and compliance with collective-bargaining agreements is non-negotiable. Strengths: deepest complex-shift logic in the category, credential matching, qualification rules, fatigue rules, union seniority, and 24x7 operations support that newer SMB-focused tools cannot handle, strong fit for industrial and healthcare workforces, mature 17-year track record, and Seattle-based independent ownership. Best fit for industrial, healthcare, and public-safety workforces (200-5,000 employees) with 24x7 operations, credential requirements, and complex collective-bargaining or qualification rules. Trade-offs: implementation is more complex than mid-market peers, UI is functional but not modern, mobile experience trails Deputy and When I Work, and pricing is opaque (call-for-quote).

Best for

Industrial, healthcare, and public-safety workforces (200-5,000 employees) with 24x7 operations, credential requirements, and complex collective-bargaining or qualification rules.

Worst for

SMB hourly buyers (Deputy, When I Work, Homebase simpler), restaurant operators (7shifts purpose-built), or buyers prioritizing modern mobile UX over scheduling depth.

Strengths

  • Deepest complex-shift logic in the category
  • Credential matching and qualification rule enforcement
  • Fatigue rules and 24x7 operations support
  • Made for industrial, healthcare, public safety
  • Mature 17-year track record
  • Independent Seattle-based ownership
  • Handles collective-bargaining seniority rules natively

Weaknesses

  • Implementation more complex than mid-market peers
  • UI functional but not modern
  • Mobile experience trails Deputy and When I Work
  • Pricing opaque (call-for-quote)
  • Smaller integration ecosystem than mid-market leaders
  • Overkill for SMB hourly buyers

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Schedule
    Per employee per month custom quote; scheduling, credential matching
    Quote
  • TeamReady
    Adds time and attendance, communication, mobile clock-in
    Quote
  • WorkforceReady
    Full suite; advanced reporting, integration depth, dedicated CSM
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services typically required
  • · Integration services priced separately
  • · Long-term contracts common

Key features

  • +Complex shift logic with credential matching
  • +Qualification rule enforcement
  • +Fatigue rules and 24x7 operations support
  • +Collective-bargaining seniority handling
  • +Time and attendance
  • +Communication and mobile clock-in
  • +Reporting and analytics
25+ integrations
ADPWorkdaySAP SuccessFactorsOracle HCMKronos legacyNetSuiteBambooHR
Geography
Global; strongest in US, CA
#7

7shifts

Restaurant-specific workforce management leader.

Founded 2014 · Saskatoon, SK, Canada · private · 5-500 employees
G2 4.5 (1,180)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit 7shifts

7shifts is the restaurant-specific workforce management leader, founded 2014 in Saskatoon by Jordan Boesch. The product is purpose-built for restaurants, scheduling with sales-forecasting against POS data, tip-pool management, time clock with break enforcement, restaurant-specific labor compliance (tipped-minimum-wage, 80/20 rule, predictive scheduling for restaurants), team messaging, and integrated payroll for US restaurants. 7shifts raised an 80-million-dollar-plus Series C in 2022 led by SoftBank Vision Fund 2 with Salesforce Ventures and Enlightened Hospitality Investments participating. Strengths: deepest restaurant-specific feature set in the category, POS integrations with Toast, Square for Restaurants, Lightspeed Restaurant, Clover, TouchBistro, and 25-plus other restaurant POSes, sales forecasting that uses actual POS data rather than generic footfall, tip-pool management, and restaurant-specific compliance handling that generalist tools fumble, strong founder-led culture, mature 11-year track record, and clean mobile UX. Best fit for independent restaurants and small chains (1-50 locations) wanting purpose-built workforce management that handles restaurant-specific complexity natively. Trade-offs: vertical depth means horizontal value is lower, outside restaurants the product is unremarkable; mid-market and enterprise restaurant chains (50-plus locations) often outgrow 7shifts and move to Crunchtime, HotSchedules, or UKG Ready; per-location pricing scales meaningfully past 25 locations.

Best for

Independent restaurants and small chains (1-50 locations) wanting purpose-built workforce management with native POS integration and restaurant-specific compliance.

Worst for

Non-restaurant operators (Deputy or When I Work better generalist fit), enterprise restaurant chains 50-plus locations (Crunchtime or UKG Ready stronger), or buyers prioritizing AI-first labor forecasting (Legion stronger).

Strengths

  • Deepest restaurant-specific feature set in the category
  • POS integrations with 30-plus restaurant POSes
  • Sales forecasting using actual POS data
  • Tip-pool management native
  • Restaurant-specific compliance (tipped-minimum, 80/20 rule)
  • Strong founder-led culture
  • Clean mobile UX

Weaknesses

  • Vertical depth means horizontal value low (outside restaurants unremarkable)
  • Mid-market and enterprise restaurant chains often outgrow it
  • Per-location pricing scales meaningfully past 25 locations
  • European footprint lighter than Quinyx
  • AI labor forecasting trails Legion

Pricing tiers

public
  • Comp (Free)
    Free; one location, up to 30 employees, basic scheduling
    $0 /mo
  • Entree
    Per location per month; full scheduling, time clock, integrations
    $29.99 /mo
  • The Works
    Per location per month; sales forecasting, manager log book, advanced reporting
    $69.99 /mo
  • Gourmet
    Per location per month; predictive scheduling compliance, multi-location reporting, dedicated CSM
    $135 /mo
  • Payroll
    Add-on; US only; 39.99 dollars base plus 6 dollars per employee
    $39.99+$6 /mo +/emp
Watch for
  • · Per-location pricing punishing for multi-location operators
  • · Payroll add-on US only
  • · Some compliance features gated to Gourmet tier
  • · Annual billing for discount

Key features

  • +Restaurant scheduling with POS-anchored sales forecasting
  • +Tip-pool management
  • +Time clock with break enforcement
  • +Restaurant compliance (tipped-minimum, 80/20)
  • +Manager log book
  • +Team messaging
  • +Integrated payroll (US)
  • +POS integrations
50+ integrations
ToastSquare for RestaurantsLightspeed RestaurantCloverTouchBistroRevelAlohaMicrosGustoADP RunQuickBooks
Geography
US, CA, AU, UK
#6

Homebase

SMB scheduling, time tracking, plus integrated payroll bundle leader.

Founded 2014 · San Francisco, CA · private · 5-50 employees
G2 4.3 (1,380)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Homebase

Homebase is the SMB scheduling and time-tracking-plus-integrated-payroll bundle leader, founded 2014 in San Francisco. The product covers scheduling, time clock with photo verification, team messaging, hiring and onboarding, and an integrated payroll module that competes with Gusto and ADP Run in the under-50-employee band. Homebase raised a 400-million-dollar-plus Series D in 2021 led by Bain Capital Ventures and GGV Capital at a peak unicorn valuation; valuation has been widely reported as soft to flat through 2024 in the broader SMB-fintech reset, with no public mark-up and at least one secondary transaction reported below the 2021 round price. Strengths: cleanest free-tier scheduling in the category (Homebase Basic is genuinely free for one location with unlimited employees), strong mobile-first UX, integrated payroll bundle that materially reduces vendor count for SMB hourly businesses, and broad POS integrations (Square, Toast, Clover, Lightspeed, Shopify POS). Best fit for SMB hourly businesses (5-50 employees), restaurants, retail, services, wanting a single bundled platform for scheduling, time tracking, and payroll. Trade-offs and the editorial caveat: the 2021 valuation peak has not held up, multiple reporting sources have flagged flat-to-down marks through 2024, layoffs of approximately 12 percent of staff in late 2023, and a renewed focus on profitability that has shown up in pricing tier shuffles. The product remains the SMB bundle leader; the company financial trajectory is worth watching.

Best for

SMB hourly businesses (5-50 employees), restaurants, retail, services, wanting a single bundled platform for scheduling, time tracking, and payroll.

Worst for

Mid-market and enterprise hourly workforces (Deputy and UKG Ready stronger), restaurant operators wanting deepest POS-anchored vertical depth (7shifts purpose-built), or buyers prioritizing pricing predictability through 2024-2026 reset.

Strengths

  • Cleanest free tier in the category (one location, unlimited employees)
  • Strong mobile-first UX
  • Integrated payroll bundle reduces vendor count for SMB
  • Broad POS integrations (Square, Toast, Clover, Lightspeed, Shopify POS)
  • Hiring and onboarding included in scheduling tier
  • Best for under-50-employee businesses

Weaknesses

  • Valuation soft-to-down through 2024 per public reporting
  • Layoffs of approximately 12 percent late 2023
  • Pricing tier shuffles affecting feature gating
  • Mid-market and enterprise bands not credible (under 50 is the sweet spot)
  • Labor forecasting basic relative to mid-market peers

Pricing tiers

public
  • Basic
    Free; one location, unlimited employees, scheduling, time clock
    $0 /mo
  • Essentials
    Per location per month; team messaging, performance tracking
    $24.95 /mo
  • Plus
    Per location per month; hiring, onboarding, time-off PTO tracking
    $59.95 /mo
  • All-in-One
    Per location per month; all features, business insights, advanced compliance
    $99.95 /mo
  • Payroll
    Add-on; 39 dollars base plus 6 dollars per employee per month
    $39+$6 /mo +/emp
Watch for
  • · Per-location pricing means multi-location operators pay per location not per employee
  • · Payroll add-on priced separately
  • · Some hiring features gated to Plus or higher tier
  • · Annual billing for discount

Key features

  • +Scheduling
  • +Time clock with photo verification
  • +Team messaging
  • +Hiring and onboarding
  • +Integrated payroll (add-on)
  • +Performance tracking
  • +POS integrations
35+ integrations
SquareToastCloverLightspeedShopify POSQuickBooksGustoADP RunIndeedZipRecruiter
Geography
US, CA
#9

Legion

AI-driven workforce management for enterprise retail and hospitality.

Founded 2016 · Redwood City, CA · private · 1,000-50,000 employees
G2 4.6 (280)
Capterra 4.7
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Legion

Legion Technologies is the AI-driven workforce management platform for enterprise retail and hospitality, founded 2016 in Redwood City by Sanish Mondkar (former CPO at SAP SuccessFactors). The product is built around AI-driven labor forecasting, demand-based scheduling, and predictive scheduling compliance, explicitly positioning itself against UKG Ready and the legacy mid-market incumbents. Legion raised a 50-million-dollar-plus Series D in 2024 led by Riverwood Capital with NEA, Norwest, and Workday Ventures participating, bringing total funding past 150 million dollars. Strengths: deepest AI labor forecasting in the category, Legion Optimal Labor Schedule uses machine learning to predict demand from POS, foot traffic, weather, and other signals and generates schedules that consistently reduce labor cost 4-8 percent in customer-reported case studies, aggressive feature velocity, founder-led culture, strong fit for enterprise retail and hospitality (1,000-plus employees), and predictive scheduling compliance toolkit. Best fit for enterprise retail and hospitality orgs (1,000-50,000 employees) willing to operationalise AI-driven labor forecasting and committed to running it as a strategic capability rather than a nice-to-have. Trade-offs: implementation complexity higher than mid-market peers (Legion needs clean POS data and meaningful labor-cost discipline to deliver), pricing is opaque (call-for-quote at all tiers), product is overkill for SMB and most mid-market buyers, and the AI-first positioning means the product expects buyers to act on forecasts (organisations that override AI recommendations regularly will not see promised savings).

Best for

Enterprise retail and hospitality orgs (1,000-50,000 employees) willing to operationalise AI-driven labor forecasting as a strategic capability with clean POS data and meaningful labor-cost discipline.

Worst for

SMB and most mid-market buyers (Deputy or UKG Ready better fit), organisations not ready to act on AI forecasts (savings will not materialise), or European multi-country deployments (Quinyx stronger).

Strengths

  • Deepest AI labor forecasting in the category
  • Demand-based scheduling using POS, foot traffic, weather signals
  • Aggressive feature velocity
  • Founder-led culture
  • Fits enterprise retail and hospitality (1,000-plus employees)
  • Predictive scheduling compliance toolkit
  • Customer-reported labor cost reduction 4-8 percent

Weaknesses

  • Implementation complexity higher than mid-market peers
  • Pricing opaque (call-for-quote at all tiers)
  • Overkill for SMB and most mid-market buyers
  • AI-first positioning expects buyers to act on forecasts
  • Limited European footprint relative to Quinyx
  • Smaller customer base than incumbents

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Workforce Management
    Per employee per month custom quote; scheduling, time and attendance, labor forecasting
    Quote
  • Workforce Engagement
    Adds team comms, employee app, gig-worker marketplace
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Full suite plus advanced AI optimisation, dedicated CSM, integration depth
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services typically 15-25 percent of first-year contract
  • · POS data integration may require additional work
  • · Multi-year contracts common
  • · Buyers should benchmark labor-cost savings claims with ROI clauses

Key features

  • +AI-driven labor forecasting (Legion Optimal Labor Schedule)
  • +Demand-based scheduling
  • +Time and attendance
  • +Predictive scheduling compliance
  • +Workforce engagement and team comms
  • +Gig-worker marketplace
  • +Reporting and analytics
40+ integrations
WorkdayUKG ProADPSAP SuccessFactorsOracle HCMSquareToastNCRSalesforce
Geography
US, CA; lighter EU presence

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Deputy vs Quinyx for a UK retail chain of 200-1,000 employees?
Deputy is the stronger choice for UK-only retail operations: deeper UK payroll integrations (Xero, Sage, ADP UK, BrightPay), cleaner mobile-first UX, and lower per-employee cost at the 200-1,000 employee band. Quinyx is the stronger choice when the retailer operates in UK plus Germany, Sweden, Netherlands, or other EU markets: Quinyx's multi-country deployment capability and EU data residency are genuine advantages for cross-border retail groups. If you operate only in the UK, Deputy is the default. If you operate in UK plus 2+ EU countries, Quinyx is the more practical infrastructure choice.
How do the Working Time Regulations 1998 affect WFM platform selection?
Working Time Regulations 1998 require tracking: average weekly hours over a 17-week reference period (for the 48-hour opt-out monitoring), 11-hour consecutive daily rest, 24-hour weekly rest, and 20-minute break entitlements after 6 hours. WFM platforms must track these at the point of schedule publication and flag violations before shifts are published. Deputy and Quinyx both have WTR compliance toolkits built into the scheduling workflow. Planday tracks WTR constraints but is less automated in pre-publication flagging. When I Work and Homebase have basic overtime alerts but are not calibrated to WTR reference-period averaging. For any UK employer with 50+ employees, WTR compliance automation should be a mandatory selection criterion.
What impact does the UK Employment Rights Bill have on WFM software selection?
The Employment Rights Bill (in parliamentary progress, expected to take effect in stages from 2026-2027) introduces the right to request a predictable working pattern and enhanced protections for zero-hours-contract workers. WFM platforms that generate hours-worked audit trails (supporting predictable-hours assessments), maintain shift-offer records (for zero-hours rights tracking), and can model the impact of regular-hours guarantees on scheduling costs will have a compliance advantage. Deputy and Quinyx are the platforms most actively building toward these requirements. Planday and When I Work are building support but are earlier stage. If your workforce is primarily zero-hours or irregular-hours workers (UK hospitality, retail, gig-adjacent), confirm that any WFM vendor you evaluate has an Employment Rights Bill readiness roadmap before committing to a multi-year contract.
Workforce management vs time tracking, what is the difference?
Workforce management is purpose-built for hourly workforces and centers on shift scheduling, time and attendance, labor forecasting, predictive scheduling compliance, and break and overtime enforcement. Time tracking (covered in our Top 10 Time Tracking Software ranking) is purpose-built for project hours and centers on a clean timer, project and client tracking, billable rates, and reporting, typically used by knowledge-work teams, agencies, and consultancies. The use cases overlap at the edges (some hourly businesses also bill clients; some agencies also schedule shifts), but the buyer journey is different. If your primary need is scheduling 50 hourly workers across multiple shifts and locations, choose a workforce management tool (Deputy, When I Work, Homebase, 7shifts). If your primary need is tracking how long a project takes and billing a client for it, choose a time tracking tool (Toggl Track, Harvest, Clockify).
How does predictive scheduling law compliance work?
Predictive scheduling laws (also called fair workweek laws) require employers to publish schedules a minimum number of days in advance (typically 14), pay penalty premiums for last-minute changes, offer additional hours to existing employees before hiring, and provide good-faith estimates of hours at hire. Currently in force: New York City (Fair Workweek Law, 2017), San Francisco (Formula Retail Employee Rights Ordinance, 2014), Seattle (Secure Scheduling Ordinance, 2017), Oregon (statewide, 2018), Chicago (Fair Workweek Ordinance, 2020), Philadelphia (Fair Workweek Ordinance, 2020), and Emeryville CA. Coverage typically applies to retail, hospitality, and food-service employers above a size threshold. Workforce management platforms with predictive scheduling toolkits (Deputy strongest, UKG Ready strong, Legion strong, Quinyx strong for EU equivalents, When I Work and Homebase functional) auto-flag posted schedules inside the protected window, calculate predictability premiums, and surface offered-hours obligations. Compliance is the buyer's responsibility, not the vendor's, but the right tool reduces exposure materially.
UKG Ready vs UKG Pro, which one do I need?
These are two distinct products on the same parent codebase tree with different buyer journeys. UKG Ready is the SMB and mid-market workforce management offering (50-2,000 employees), built from the legacy Kronos Workforce Ready, anchored on scheduling and time-and-attendance with optional payroll and HR modules. UKG Pro is the enterprise HRIS (1,000-plus employees, typically 5,000-50,000), built from the legacy Ultimate Software UltiPro, anchored on core HR, payroll, and talent management with optional workforce management modules. UKG Pro is covered in our Top 10 HRIS / Core HR Software ranking. The dividing line is roughly 2,000 employees and whether the primary buyer is an HR director (UKG Pro) or an operations director with hourly workforce focus (UKG Ready). Both are owned by UKG (Hellman and Friedman plus Blackstone PE-backed); the parent-PE pressure pattern applies to both.
What is the PE-pressure pattern at UKG and why does it matter?
UKG is owned by Hellman and Friedman and Blackstone in a structure tracing to the 2007 Kronos take-private, the 2018 Hellman and Friedman recapitalization, and the 2020 Kronos plus Ultimate Software merger. Across the post-merger period (2020-2026) customer reviews on G2, Capterra, Reddit's r/hr and r/sysadmin, and operations-leader Slack groups consistently flag three patterns: (1) annual price increases above category average, frequently 10-15 percent year-over-year; (2) variable support quality post-merger as the combined organisation has been resized; (3) longer contracts (3-5 years) with auto-renewal language buyers regret. The 2021 Kronos Private Cloud ransomware incident response was widely criticised and led to multiple class-action settlements. None of this means UKG Ready is a bad product, the legacy compliance handling is genuinely the deepest in the category. But buyers should treat the parent-PE pressure as a real factor in negotiations and contracts, particularly around price-increase caps and exit clauses.
AI-driven labor forecasting, is it real or marketing?
Real, but only at scale and only if your organisation is ready to act on the forecasts. Legion (deepest in category) and Quinyx (deepest in Europe) both have customer case studies showing 4-8 percent labor cost reduction from AI-driven demand-based scheduling that uses POS, foot traffic, weather, and other signals. Deputy and UKG Ready are catching up but their AI capability today is more pattern-matching than true demand optimisation. The key conditions for AI labor forecasting to deliver: (1) you have at least 200 employees and meaningful labor-cost discipline; (2) you have clean POS or service-volume data the AI can train on; (3) managers will actually trust and run AI-generated schedules rather than override them habitually. Organisations that fail any of these conditions will not see promised savings, the AI works only when the operating model lets it work. For SMB and most mid-market buyers, traditional rule-based scheduling (Deputy, When I Work, Homebase) is the right answer; AI-first vendors are overkill.
How does workforce management integrate with payroll and HRIS?
The integration story is the most important non-obvious decision. A scheduling tool that does not feed your payroll cleanly will leak hours, miss premium-pay differentials, and create wage-and-hour risk every cycle. Most modern workforce management platforms (Deputy, When I Work, 7shifts, Homebase, Planday) integrate natively with the major US SMB payrolls (Gusto, ADP Run, QuickBooks Payroll, Paychex Flex) and the major mid-market HRIS platforms (BambooHR, Rippling, ADP Workforce Now, Paylocity, Paycom). UKG Ready uniquely includes integrated payroll as a module rather than relying on a third-party. Legion and Quinyx integrate with Workday, SAP SuccessFactors, Oracle HCM, and other enterprise HCM stacks. For deeper integration patterns see our Top 10 HRIS / Core HR Software and Top 10 Payroll Software rankings. Always test the actual flow end-to-end before signing, vendor demos are smoother than production.
How much should I budget for workforce management?
SMB single-location (5-25 employees): 0-300 dollars per month, Homebase Basic free, When I Work Essentials, 7shifts Comp free, Planday Starter. SMB multi-location (25-100 employees): 300-1,500 dollars per month, Deputy Premium, When I Work Pro, 7shifts Entree, Homebase Plus. Mid-market (100-500 employees): 1,500-7,000 dollars per month, Deputy Premium, UKG Ready, 7shifts Gourmet, Quinyx Schedule plus Time. Enterprise (500-5,000 employees): 7,000-40,000 dollars per month, UKG Ready, Shiftboard, Legion, Quinyx full suite. Add roughly 8-15 percent for annual price increases over 24-month horizons; the category has been creeping upward consistently since 2023. The single biggest TCO factor most buyers miss: implementation services. UKG Ready, Shiftboard, Legion, and Quinyx all typically charge implementation services of 15-30 percent of first-year contract; Deputy, When I Work, Homebase, and 7shifts are largely self-serve.
Can I evaluate workforce management via free trial?
Self-serve trial: Deputy (31 days), When I Work (14 days), 7shifts (14 days, plus permanent free Comp tier for one location under 30 employees), Homebase (permanent free Basic tier plus 14-day trial of higher tiers), Planday (30 days), Humanity (30 days). Demo-only with no self-serve trial: UKG Ready, Shiftboard, Legion, Quinyx, all expect a sales conversation before pilot deployment. Always test with your real workflow, schedule a real week, run a real time-and-attendance cycle, push hours to your actual payroll system, and see whether the flow holds. Common failure modes: (1) Schedule template does not reflect actual operational rhythm. (2) Time-clock GPS or photo verification breaks for field workers. (3) Premium-pay differentials, break enforcement, or predictive-scheduling-law compliance has gaps. (4) Payroll export requires manual cleanup. (5) Mobile experience falls apart for one demographic of your workforce.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Workforce Management ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-19. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.