Forum Discussion

PestFreeCanada's avatar
PestFreeCanada
Contributor 4
1 day ago

Will AI replace jobs in home service and skilled trades?

I saw an article yesterday about all the tech jobs that are being replaced by AI and I thought about how hard that would be to know your position can be replaced by someTHING that can do it faster and cheaper than you can. Then I thought how happy I am that I decided a long time ago that I am going to work with my hands. Be handy. Solve real problems.

I would be safe in saying that AI is never going to cut your lawn, remove your junk, exterminate your bed bugs, plumb in or wire your home.

Am I going to regret saying this? Is AI reading thins and just started plotting to take all our jobs???

2 Replies

  • ryaantuttle's avatar
    ryaantuttle
    Jobber Ambassador

    I used to think exactly like this but Ive completely changed my mind

    Yeah AI isnt replacing a plumber today or tomorrow but if youre thinking 10 to 20 years out I think youre wrong to assume the physical work is safe

    Boston Dynamics already has robots doing backflips and opening doors. Figure AI just raised billions to build humanoid robots for physical labor. Tesla is building Optimus specifically for repetitive physical tasks. The trajectory is pretty clear if you zoom out

    Heres what I think people miss. The argument that home services are too situational and too human facing assumes robots need to be as adaptable as humans to replace them. They dont. They just need to be good enough and cheap enough. A robot that can handle 70 percent of routine handyman tasks at half the labor cost will absolutely get deployed even if it needs a human supervisor for the tricky stuff

    The human facing part is the last moat to fall but its still going to fall. People said customers would never accept self checkout or automated customer service or robot delivery and now all of that is normal. Give it 15 years and a robot showing up to fix your garbage disposal wont feel weird to the next generation

    Where I do agree is that the timeline for full replacement is long and the near term opportunity is exactly what you said. AI handling admin scheduling estimates follow ups and all the back office stuff that buries owners. Thats happening right now and the guys who adopt it will outcompete the guys who dont

    But if youre building a home service business today and planning to pass it to your kids or sell it in 20 years you need to be watching the robotics space closely. The physical work moat is real but its not permanent

  • julie's avatar
    julie
    Jobber Community Team

    This is a great convo starter.

    You're totally right. AI isn't going to exterminate bed bugs, rewire homes, or pressure wash a driveway. Home services and skilled trades are physical, situational, and human-facing (all things that are harder to automate). 

    Where AI is starting to show up is more behind the scenes of the business: handling admin work, scheduling, estimates, follow-ups, and helping owners save time on the stuff that pulls them away from the field. So... in that sense, it’s less about replacing the work and more about support.