A retainer is a promise to deliver a defined amount of work for a fixed monthly fee. The trouble is that the work almost never stays defined. Scope creeps, hours leak, a "quick favour" becomes a recurring expectation, and four months later you are delivering double the agreed value for the same money. Then the contract auto-renews — or worse, quietly lapses — and nobody on your team noticed until the invoice bounced.
This matters more than any other operational problem an agency has, because retainers are where the margin lives. A one-off project can be mispriced and forgotten. A retainer that is over-serviced bleeds you every single month, compounding silently until renewal. The agencies that scale past a handful of clients are not the ones that win the most new business — they are the ones that protect the recurring revenue they already have. If you are still building that base, our guide on building a recurring-revenue agency with AI is the strategic companion to this tooling round-up.
Managing retainers well comes down to three boring disciplines: tracking what was promised against what was delivered, tracking time against budget, and never being surprised by a renewal date. AI will not fix a badly priced retainer — that is a pricing problem, and we cover it separately in how to price AI services as an agency. But the right tooling will catch the leaks early, surface the renewal conversation before it becomes a crisis, and tell you which clients are quietly making you poor. This guide ranks the platforms that do that, in the voice of an operator who has watched a "profitable" retainer turn into a charity case.
What a retainer-management tool actually needs to do
The category is fuzzy because no single product owns it. You are really assembling capability across four jobs, and most tools are strong on two or three of them and weak on the rest:
- Scope and deliverable tracking — what is in the contract, what shipped this cycle, what is outstanding. The audit trail that lets you say "that is out of scope" with evidence instead of vibes.
- Time and budget tracking — hours logged per client against the retainer's implied budget, with alerts before you blow it rather than after.
- Renewal and contract tracking — dates, terms, and a prompt to start the renewal conversation weeks ahead instead of the day a contract lapses.
- Profitability visibility — the one number that matters: is this client actually making money after delivery cost, or are you funding their marketing out of your own pocket?
AI's role across all four is the same: spot the pattern a human misses. Which client is trending over-budget three weeks into the cycle. Which retainer's effective hourly rate has quietly halved since onboarding. Which renewals are clustered next month and need attention now. None of this is magic — it is forecasting and anomaly detection applied to data you already generate. But the difference between a tool that surfaces it unprompted and a spreadsheet that requires you to remember to look is the difference between a 40% margin and a 12% one.
How we evaluated these tools
We are an independent review site run by people who have operated agencies, so the scoring is biased toward what actually protects margin rather than what demos well. We weighted six platforms across four axes:
- Retainer modelling — does the tool treat a recurring, capped engagement as a first-class object, or do you bolt it together from project features?
- Profitability visibility — can you see effective hourly rate and margin per client without exporting to a spreadsheet?
- Renewal management — does it warn you before a contract lapses or quietly under-delivers into a non-renewal?
- Value for an agency — total cost of ownership at a realistic seat count, weighed against the margin it protects.
We did not benchmark raw AI model quality, because in this category AI is a feature layer (forecasting, summaries, anomaly flags) on top of an ops platform, not the product itself. Pricing figures throughout are indicative ranges drawn from each vendor's public pricing pages; usage and seat counts move them around, so treat them as directional.
| Platform | Retainer modelling | Profitability | Renewal tracking | AI forecasting | Lean-team fit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ★Productive.io | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ | ~ |
| Scoro | ✓ | ✓ | ~ | ✓ | ✕ |
| Teamwork | ✓ | ~ | ~ | ~ | ✓ |
| HubSpot + AI | ✕ | ~ | ✓ | ✓ | ~ |
| ClickUp / Asana + AI | ~ | ✕ | ~DIY | ~ | ✓ |
| Harvest + Forecast | ~ | ~ | ✕ | ~ | ✓ |
The ranked list
| Tool | Best for | AI angle | Retainer fit | Pricing model |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Productive.io | All-in-one agency ops | Budget/utilisation forecasting | Excellent | Per-seat, mid-range |
| Scoro | Scope + profitability | Smart utilisation insights | Excellent | Per-seat, mid-range |
| Teamwork | Project + retainer billing | Workload/time insights | Strong | Per-seat tiers |
| HubSpot (with AI) | CRM-led renewal tracking | Deal/renewal automation | Good | Hub-based, scales up |
| ClickUp / Asana + AI | Lean delivery teams | AI summaries & automations | Moderate | Per-seat, low entry |
| Harvest + Forecast | Time-first shops | Lightweight forecasting | Moderate | Per-seat, low entry |
1. Productive.io — best all-in-one for retainer agencies
Productive was built for agencies and treats retainers as a first-class concept rather than an afterthought. You model recurring budgets, track delivery against them, and its forecasting flags when utilisation or margin is drifting before the cycle closes. For an agency that wants scope, time, billing and profitability living in one place — and wants a single number per client that says "this account is healthy" or "this account is underwater" — it is the most complete answer on this list. The AI and reporting layer is genuinely useful for capacity planning across a portfolio of retainers, which is exactly where most agencies lose visibility.
Pros: purpose-built for agencies, genuine retainer modelling, strong profitability reporting, portfolio-level forecasting. Cons: per-seat cost adds up across a full delivery team; it is more platform than a three-person shop needs, and full value requires committing your whole ops workflow to it.
2. Scoro — best for scope and profitability discipline
Scoro is the close competitor and arguably stronger on the pure financial side. Its utilisation and profitability views make over-servicing impossible to ignore, and the AI-assisted insights surface which clients are quietly unprofitable. If your retainer problem is specifically "we keep over-delivering and never notice until renewal," Scoro is built to catch exactly that — the quoting-to-billing flow keeps the commercial reality in front of you the whole way through.
Pros: excellent profitability and utilisation visibility, strong quote-to-cash flow, ruthless about exposing over-servicing. Cons: steeper setup; mid-range pricing that rewards full adoption rather than partial use; overkill for a team that just wants time tracking.
3. Teamwork — best for project-plus-retainer billing
Teamwork sits comfortably between project management and agency billing. Its retainer and time-tracking features are mature, the workload insights help with capacity planning, and it is noticeably friendlier to onboard than the heavier ops platforms. It is the balanced middle choice: a good fit when delivery management and retainer tracking genuinely need to share one home, and you do not want a six-week implementation to get there.
Pros: strong billing, good capacity insights, reasonable learning curve, fair entry pricing. Cons: retainer and profitability features are good but not as deep as Productive or Scoro; AI layer is more assistive than predictive.
4. HubSpot with AI — best when renewals are a CRM problem
If your biggest retainer risk is renewal slippage rather than scope creep, a CRM-led approach wins. HubSpot and its AI features automate renewal reminders, surface at-risk accounts based on engagement signals, and keep the commercial relationship visible alongside the work. You will need delivery and time tracking elsewhere — HubSpot is not built to tell you whether you over-serviced — but for the narrow job of never missing a renewal and spotting an account going cold, it is strong. It also pairs naturally with the upsell motion, which is where a lot of retainer growth actually comes from.
Pros: excellent renewal and deal automation, at-risk account signals, enormous ecosystem and integrations. Cons: not a delivery or time-tracking tool; costs climb steeply as you add hubs and seats; profitability per client lives outside it.
5. ClickUp or Asana plus AI — best for lean delivery teams
For smaller agencies, a general work platform with AI layered on covers a surprising amount of ground cheaply. AI summaries, automated status updates, and custom fields for renewal dates get you most of the way to a functioning retainer system. You will do more manual setup and you will not get true profitability reporting out of the box, but the entry cost is low and the flexibility is high. The risk is discipline: it is easy to build something messy that nobody maintains, at which point you are back to the spreadsheet problem with extra steps.
Pros: low cost, highly flexible, AI automations cut real admin time, fast to start. Cons: retainer and profitability tracking are DIY; easy to over-build; no native sense of "is this client profitable."
6. Harvest plus Forecast — best for time-first shops
If your retainers are fundamentally about hours, Harvest's time tracking paired with Forecast's capacity planning is a clean, lightweight stack. The forecasting is modest, but the one signal that matters — are we on track to exceed budgeted hours this cycle — comes through clearly and early. Pair it with a CRM for the renewal side, because contract management is not what this stack is for.
Pros: simple, reliable, excellent time-budget clarity, gentle learning curve. Cons: light on scope tracking, billing depth and renewal management; you will bolt on at least one other tool.
Scoring the shortlist
The matrix above tells you what each tool can do. The scorecard below is our weighted judgement of how well it does it for a retainer-led agency, on a 0-to-1 scale across the four axes from our methodology.
The pattern is clear: the purpose-built ops platforms (Productive, Scoro) dominate on modelling and profitability but cost more and demand commitment; the lean stacks (ClickUp, Harvest) win on value but make you do the thinking; and HubSpot is a specialist that solves one axis brilliantly and ignores the rest.
Price versus capability
Pricing in this category is almost entirely per-seat, which means the "expensive" platforms get more expensive precisely as your agency grows and the margin stakes get higher. The chart below maps indicative entry prices per user, per month. Treat these as directional — every vendor tiers features, and the cheapest plan rarely includes the profitability reporting you actually came for.
Read this alongside the scorecard, not on its own. A $10 seat that leaves you blind to profitability is not cheap — it is expensive in margin you cannot see. The right way to frame the spend is against the cost of a single mismanaged retainer: one client you over-service by ten hours a month at a $120 blended rate is $14,400 a year in leaked value, which buys a lot of seats on any platform here.
Where each tool lands
If you prefer the picture to the table, here is the positioning map. The vertical axis is overall retainer capability; the horizontal axis is cost. The top-left quadrant — strong capability at a reasonable price — is where most growing agencies should be shopping.
A simple operating rhythm
Tools only help if they feed a routine. The best platform in the world is worthless if nobody opens it between renewals. Here is a workable monthly cadence that works on top of any of the tools above:
- Week 1: confirm the cycle's deliverables against the contract scope. This is also where a tight onboarding pays off — if scope was documented properly at the start (see automating client onboarding with AI), this check takes minutes instead of an argument.
- Mid-cycle: check logged hours against budget. If a client is past 60% of budget at the halfway mark, flag it now and decide whether it is a one-off or a scope conversation.
- Renewal minus 6 weeks: the tool surfaces the date and you open the conversation early, from a position of evidence rather than panic. Six weeks gives you room to renegotiate scope or rate without the client feeling cornered.
- Cycle close: review effective hourly rate per client. Anything trending down is next quarter's pricing conversation, and the data to justify it is already in the tool.
This rhythm is also where the renewal becomes an upsell. A client you have demonstrably over-delivered for is the easiest expansion you will ever sell — provided you bring the evidence. The same reporting that protects your margin doubles as the proof you need for the conversation, which is why retainer ops and client reporting are really two halves of the same discipline.
The profitability point most agencies miss
Retainer management is not really about admin. It is about knowing your effective hourly rate per client and acting on it before renewal forces the issue. Every tool above converges on that number from a different angle: Scoro and Productive show it to you directly; Harvest infers it from hours; HubSpot protects the renewal that keeps the revenue alive but tells you nothing about whether that revenue is profitable. Pick the tool whose primary view is the metric you most often lose track of, not the one with the longest feature list.
There is a second number that matters almost as much: renewal lead time. An agency that starts every renewal conversation six weeks out, armed with delivery evidence, will hold rates and reduce churn far more effectively than one scrambling the week a contract expires. That is a process discipline more than a software feature, but the software is what makes the discipline survivable at scale. And it connects directly to your sales motion — the same evidence that wins a renewal feeds the case studies and upsell pitches your sales tooling turns into new revenue. Renewals and proposals share DNA too; a strong renewal is essentially a re-proposal, which is why proposal software earns its place adjacent to your retainer stack.
Verdict
For a serious retainer agency, Productive.io or Scoro is the right home base — both treat retainers, scope and profitability as the core job rather than a bolt-on, and both will pay for themselves the first time they catch a client drifting underwater. Teamwork is the value sweet spot for agencies that want most of that capability without the full implementation tax. If your specific pain is missed renewals rather than scope creep, bolt HubSpot onto your delivery stack and let it own the commercial calendar. And genuinely lean teams can get surprisingly far with ClickUp or Asana plus AI, or a Harvest plus Forecast time-first stack, before they need anything heavier.
But the tool matters less than the discipline it enforces. Know exactly what you promised, know exactly what it cost to deliver, and never — ever — be surprised by a renewal date. The agencies that internalise those three rules keep their margin. The ones that do not subsidise their clients out of their own profit and call it a busy month.