Software roundup

Casual staff management apps in 2026: 9 honest options

Casual workforces don't fit standard rostering tools. Variable availability, last-minute cover, multi-job juggling, and constant turnover make this a different coordination problem. Here are nine apps that handle it, split into free pool-coordination tools and paid compliance-aware options, with honest assessments of each.

Casual staff management apps in 2026: 9 honest options

Feature comparison

Product Free planPricing modelBuilt-in chatCompliance automation
Zelos Yes — unlimited Per organisation
Sling Yes — 30 Per worker
Shiftbase Yes — 10 Per worker Basic
Connecteam Yes — 10 Per hub
Findmyshift Yes — 5 Per team Limited
Deputy 31-day trial Per worker Yes (AU)
RosterElf 15-day trial Per active worker Yes (AU)
RotaCloud 30-day trial Per employee band Basic (UK)
Planday 30-day trial Per worker Basic (UK)

If you run a pub, café, hotel, retail shop, care home, school relief pool, or any business that depends on a roster of casual workers, you already know the standard workforce management tools don’t quite fit. They’re built for fixed teams on predictable hours. Your team is the opposite: twenty people on the books, six available next Saturday, half of them juggling another job, and three messages on WhatsApp asking if Tuesday’s shift is still on.

Casual workforce management is a different coordination problem from managing salaried teams. It shows up wherever fluid teams are normal: hospitality, retail, healthcare, events, brand ambassador programmes, school relief pools, and volunteer-led nonprofits. And it’s getting more attention in 2026 for two reasons.

In Australia, casual employment is structural. Around a quarter of the workforce is on casual contracts, and in hospitality that figure sits closer to two-thirds. The Fair Work framework, casual loading rules, minimum shift lengths under industry awards, and the casual-to-permanent conversion process all add admin overhead that fixed-roster software ignores.

In the UK, the Employment Rights Act 2025 received royal assent in December 2025 and starts phasing in through 2026 and 2027. The new rules cover guaranteed-hours offers for workers on zero-hours and low-hours arrangements, reasonable advance notice of shifts, and statutory payments when shifts are cancelled or curtailed at short notice. If you employ casuals in the UK, you need systems that record shift offers, notice timing, and worker responses in a way you can defend if questioned.

Most “best scheduling app” lists treat casual workforces as a footnote within general staff rostering. They’re not. They’re a distinct coordination problem with two layers: the daily dispatch (who’s working tomorrow night) and the compliance layer (does what I’m doing meet my Fair Work or ERA 2025 obligations). Different tools solve different layers. Below, the two categories side by side.

Why casual rostering is different

Before picking a tool, it helps to be specific about what makes casual staff different to coordinate.

Availability is the constraint, not the roster. With permanent staff, you build a roster and people work it. With casuals, you have to know who’s available before you can publish anything, and the answer changes weekly.

Workers self-select. Casuals are usually motivated to claim shifts (or decline them), not to be assigned. Tools that lean into open-shift signup rather than top-down assignment match the relationship better.

Cover is constant. Someone always cancels. The faster you can broadcast an open shift to the people qualified to fill it, the less time you spend on the phone.

Multiple jobs are normal. Most casuals work for two or three employers. The app needs to be usable on a phone in thirty seconds, or it won’t get opened.

Onboarding never stops. Casual turnover is high. Whatever tool you pick, getting a new starter into the system needs to be a five-minute job, not a half-day training session.

The right tool depends on which layer is your bottleneck. If it’s daily dispatch (getting shifts filled fast), start with the free pool-coordination apps. If it’s award interpretation, casual loading, or ERA 2025 compliance, you’ll need one of the paid AU/UK-native tools.

Free pool coordination apps: shift dispatch and worker communication

These are the tools your supervisors open every morning. They’re built for fluid pools where availability changes weekly, shifts get broadcast to the right people, and the worker app is what actually fills the next shift. All five publish their pricing and offer permanent free plans, which makes them fast to evaluate.

If your bottleneck is filling shifts rather than tracking awards, start here. Many small and mid-sized operators can run their whole casual workforce on one of these tools alone, with payroll and compliance handled separately by their bookkeeper or accountant.

Zelos Team Management

Pool-first signup app with chat built in

Zelos takes a signup-board approach to casual dispatch. Admins post shifts (with role, time, location, skills required, and any notes), workers get push notifications on the mobile app, and whoever is available and qualified claims the work first. No top-down assignment, no per-person fees, no rostering grid to maintain. By design. The model assumes the worker is the best person to decide whether they can take the shift.

Built-in chat is core to the product, not a bolt-on. Each shift has its own conversation thread, so the venue address, parking notes, last-minute changes, and questions stay attached to the work rather than getting buried in a group chat. Worker contact information is hidden from other workers by design, which keeps the workspace professional and protects privacy. Smart targeting means only the relevant casuals see the right shifts: a pool of 50 with 12 bartenders means only those 12 get the Friday late-shift notification.

  • Free plan: Unlimited workers and admins, 25 concurrent active shifts or tasks, last 100 archived, 10,000 chat messages, gamification, CSV exports.
  • Paid plans: Pro from $99/month annual ($119 monthly), flat, not per-person. Adds unlimited active shifts, full archive, bulk CSV upload, dynamic segments, custom team URL. Enterprise from $999/month for white-label app, API access, and webhooks.
  • Pricing model: Per organisation. Same price whether your pool is 10 casuals or 1,000.
  • Communication: Built-in team chat with per-shift threads, admin-supervised. Push notifications. No customer-facing SMS.
  • Best for: Casual pools where workers self-select, especially hospitality groups, festival crews, on-call carers, brand ambassadors, and event ops. Suits operators who want one flat cost regardless of pool size.
  • Watch out for: No award interpretation, no casual loading calculation, no payroll. No GPS clock-in. Zelos is the coordination layer; you’ll still need a payroll system underneath and your own awareness of your Fair Work or ERA 2025 obligations.
  • Platforms: Native iOS, Android, and web. EU-built and GDPR-compliant by default.

Sling

Drag-and-drop scheduling with open shifts and built-in chat

Sling’s free plan covers up to 30 workers and includes shift scheduling, time-off requests, shift swaps, team messaging, and a company newsfeed. Multi-location support is on the free plan, which is unusual and useful if you run two cafés or a small group of venues. The mental model is closer to traditional rostering than to a pure signup board, but workers can claim open shifts directly from the app, which is what matters for a casual pool.

Sling has emerged as the closest functional replacement for the now-discontinued Crew app, which was acquired by Square in 2021 and shut down in 2024. For small AU and UK operators who were using Crew, Sling fills the same gap with a more generous free plan.

  • Free plan: Drag-and-drop scheduling, shift swap requests, time-off requests, group and direct messaging, newsfeed, multi-location support, up to 30 workers.
  • Paid plans: Premium at $1.70 per worker per month annual adds time tracking and overtime alerts. Business at $3.40 per worker per month annual adds labour cost reports.
  • Pricing model: Per worker per month, after the free tier.
  • Communication: Built-in direct messages, group chats, and a company newsfeed. Push notifications for shift offers and changes.
  • Best for: Hospitality and retail teams of up to 30 that want scheduling and chat in one app and are happy with USD pricing.
  • Watch out for: No award interpretation or Working Time Regulations checks. Pricing is in USD, which introduces a currency-fluctuation factor for UK and AU buyers. Recent reviews mention occasional mobile sync delays and inconsistent notifications.
  • Platforms: Native iOS, Android, and web.

Shiftbase

Schedule and absence wired together, UK and EU positioning

Shiftbase is built around the schedule being the single source of truth. Availability, approved leave, and contracts all sit inside the schedule, so when a casual updates their availability or you approve a holiday request, the roster reflects it immediately. Open shifts can be published to the pool and claimed from the app. Of the free options on this list, it has the tightest connection between scheduling and leave, which is useful when last-minute absences are a constant.

  • Free plan: Core scheduling, leave requests, and absence management for up to 10 employees.
  • Paid plans: From around £3 per worker per month for the next tier, scaling up by feature depth.
  • Pricing model: Per worker per month.
  • Communication: In-app messaging, shift notifications, leave-request workflow.
  • Best for: UK and EU hospitality or retail teams up to 10 that want scheduling and absence in one connected system from day one.
  • Watch out for: 10-employee free cap is small for most casual pools. Compliance features (Working Time Regulations flagging, contract hour limits) sit on the paid plans. Less brand recognition than Deputy or RotaCloud in the UK market.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, and Android.

Connecteam

Full workforce app with scheduling, time clock, chat, and training

Connecteam bundles scheduling, GPS time clock, in-app chat, training modules, digital forms, and checklists into one mobile-first app. Workers can swap shifts, complete onboarding quizzes, message managers, and submit timesheets. Pricing is modular across three “Hubs” (Operations, Communications, HR & Skills), each priced independently. The free Small Business Plan gives you full feature access to all three hubs for up to 10 workers.

For a small café or shop with a handful of casuals where you want one app to handle onboarding, daily scheduling, and team communication, the free plan is genuinely complete.

  • Free plan: Full access to all three hubs for up to 10 workers. GPS time clock, scheduling, in-app chat, digital forms, training delivery, checklists.
  • Paid plans: Basic from $29/month, Advanced from $49/month, Expert from $99/month, each per hub for up to 30 workers on annual billing. Additional workers charged separately above 30.
  • Pricing model: Flat for first 30 workers per hub, then per worker. Multi-hub deployments add up.
  • Communication: Built-in chat (direct, group, and channels), push notifications, surveys, broadcast updates.
  • Best for: Small operators (under 10 casuals) who want one app covering scheduling, communication, training, and basic HR for their pool.
  • Watch out for: 10-worker cap is restrictive for typical casual pools. Hub-based pricing gets confusing fast. A 30-person team using two hubs on Basic plans is around $58/month annual, three hubs is $87. Not purpose-built for casual workforces; designed for businesses scheduling their own permanent employees, so multi-employer casual scenarios need workarounds.
  • Platforms: Native iOS, Android, and web.

Findmyshift

UK-built simple rota, free forever for very small teams

Findmyshift has been running from the UK since 2004 and has hosted over 200 million shifts. The free plan is genuinely free forever for teams of up to five, including drag-and-drop rota, time clock, timesheets, and basic reporting. Staff can request, swap, and cancel shifts through the web or mobile interface. It’s plain rather than polished, but it works.

  • Free plan: Drag-and-drop rota, time clock, timesheets, shift requests and swaps, basic reports, up to 5 staff. Scheduling and history limited to one week each side of today; no templates, no payroll calculation, no custom columns.
  • Paid plans: From $27/month per team for unlimited staff, templates, real-time reporting, and payroll calculation.
  • Pricing model: Per team per month (not per worker) above the free tier.
  • Communication: Email, SMS, and push notifications for shift changes. Built-in noticeboard for messages and documents.
  • Best for: Very small UK operations (a single shop, café, or tiny venue with five or fewer casuals) that want a free, no-frills rota.
  • Watch out for: 5-staff cap is the most restrictive on this list; most casual pools outgrow it immediately. Interface is dated. No award interpretation or Working Time Regulations checks.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, and Android.

These are the tools you reach for when the compliance layer becomes the bottleneck rather than dispatch. They handle award interpretation, casual loading calculation, leave accrual on hours worked, payroll exports to local providers, and the documentary evidence needed for AU Fair Work or the new UK Employment Rights Act 2025 obligations. None of them have a permanent free plan. Each offers a 14-to-31-day trial then requires payment.

Smaller operators often don’t need these tools at all in the early years, especially if their bookkeeper or accountant handles award compliance. They become useful once the cost of compliance admin starts outweighing the subscription, or once a single misclassified shift creates real liability.

Deputy

AU-origin rostering with strong Fair Work support and a UK presence

Deputy is one of the AU incumbents in hospitality and retail scheduling, with strong support for casual workforces specifically. The platform handles drag-and-drop rostering, GPS clock-in, shift swap requests, automated timesheet generation, and award interpretation for Australian Fair Work awards. UK functionality is present but less mature than the AU-native build. Integrates with most major payroll providers in both markets.

For AU operators with casual employees on industry awards, Deputy’s automated award interpretation reduces the admin overhead of getting casual loading, overtime, and penalty rates right.

  • Free plan: None. 31-day free trial, no credit card required.
  • Paid plans: Lite at A$5 per worker per month, Core at A$6.50 per worker per month, Pro at A$9 per worker per month, Enterprise custom. Deputy HR add-on at A$2 per worker per month. UK pricing similar with a £20 minimum monthly spend.
  • Pricing model: Per worker per month.
  • Communication: In-app messaging, shift notifications, SMS (with usage charges), email integration. Messaging+ add-on available on Lite and Core.
  • Best for: AU hospitality, retail, healthcare, and similar shift-based businesses with casual employees on Fair Work awards. UK operators wanting an established product with Xero and QuickBooks integration.
  • Watch out for: Per-worker pricing scales with your full pool including inactive casuals. Check whether unused profiles count toward your bill. UK award and compliance features are less mature than AU equivalents. SMS notifications incur per-message charges.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, Android.

RosterElf

AU-native rostering with built-in award interpretation

RosterElf is Australian-built and Australian-supported, with award interpretation included in every plan rather than as an add-on. Features include drag-and-drop rostering, GPS-based clock-in, leave management, shift swaps, and direct payroll integration with Xero and MYOB. The company explicitly positions against Deputy on AU-specific compliance and price.

For small-to-mid Australian operators where casual workforce and award compliance are the daily concerns, RosterElf is the most opinionated option.

  • Free plan: None. 15-day free trial, no credit card required.
  • Paid plans: From A$6 per worker per month on annual billing ($7 monthly), with a A$25 minimum monthly spend. All features included; no separate modules to add.
  • Pricing model: Per active worker per month. Casuals on extended leave or terminated profiles don’t count toward your bill.
  • Communication: In-app messaging, shift notifications, leave-request workflow. Australian-based support team included on all plans.
  • Best for: Australian small-to-mid operators (hospitality, retail, aged care) where award interpretation, casual loading, and Xero or MYOB payroll integration are the deciding criteria.
  • Watch out for: No free plan at all. AU-focused. UK and international support is limited. Some reviewers note the interface feels dated and the rota view is slower than competitors due to auto-save behaviour.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, Android.

RotaCloud

UK-built rota with affordable pricing and strong UK support

RotaCloud is UK-built and UK-supported, with around 5,000 small-to-mid UK businesses on the platform: hospitality, care homes, retail, and independent venues. The core product is a drag-and-drop rota with real-time labour cost overlay, leave management, shift swaps, and open shifts staff can claim from the app. Time and Attendance is a flat-priced add-on rather than per-worker, which keeps costs predictable as the team grows.

For independent UK venues moving off spreadsheets for the first time, RotaCloud is often the first paid option on the shortlist.

  • Free plan: None. 30-day free trial.
  • Paid plans: From £10/month for up to 5 employees on the Standard plan, scaled by team size. Time & Attendance add-on at flat £4.50/month regardless of team size.
  • Pricing model: Per employee band rather than per worker, significantly cheaper than per-worker competitors for small teams.
  • Communication: Email, push, and SMS notifications. Built-in shift swap and open shift workflow.
  • Best for: Independent UK hospitality, retail, and care home operators with simpler casual workforces where ease of use and UK-based support matter more than deep award automation.
  • Watch out for: Native payroll integrations limited to Sage, Staffology, and PayCaptain. Xero and QuickBooks require a CSV workaround. No monthly calendar view, only weekly. No offline mode for GPS clock-in.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, Android.

Planday

Xero-owned, UK and EU hospitality scheduling

Planday is now part of the Xero ecosystem and integrates natively with Xero accounting, which makes payroll prep meaningfully faster for venues already running on Xero. The platform handles scheduling, time tracking, leave management, and built-in team communication, with a clean interface designed for hospitality and retail. It’s well-suited to UK and EU operators where casual staff are the norm.

For Xero customers who want the scheduling-to-payroll handoff as tight as possible, Planday is the natural pick, though operators with very complex multi-site labour costing sometimes outgrow it.

  • Free plan: None. 30-day free trial, no credit card required.
  • Paid plans: From £2.99 per worker per month on the Starter plan (UK pricing). Plus and Pro tiers add advanced scheduling and reporting. Enterprise custom-quoted. Minimum five workers.
  • Pricing model: Per worker per month.
  • Communication: Built-in team chat, shift notifications, broadcast announcements.
  • Best for: UK and EU hospitality SMEs already using Xero who want scheduling and payroll prep tightly connected, plus built-in team communication.
  • Watch out for: Five-worker minimum on paid plans. Less suited to operators with complex multi-site labour cost management needs. Some operators mention a learning curve when getting started.
  • Platforms: Web, iOS, Android.

Frequently asked questions

What’s the difference between casual and zero-hours workers?

In Australia, “casual” is a defined legal employment category: workers without firm advance commitment of hours, paid a casual loading of around 25% in lieu of leave entitlements, with rights to request conversion to permanent after 12 months of regular work. In the UK, casual work and zero-hours arrangements both involve no guaranteed hours but are legally distinct: a zero-hours contract creates an ongoing employment relationship with continuing statutory rights between assignments, while casual work usually means each shift is a separate engagement. Most coordination software treats the two the same; compliance software does not.

Do free coordination apps handle Fair Work award compliance?

No. None of the apps on the free list above calculate casual loading, enforce minimum shift lengths under industry awards, track casual conversion eligibility, or interpret penalty rates automatically. They give you the coordination layer (who claimed what shift, when), and leave compliance to you, your bookkeeper, or a paid AU-native tool. RosterElf and Deputy are the AU options that include automated award interpretation.

How does the UK Employment Rights Act 2025 affect software requirements?

Employers will need systems that document shift offers, response times, advance notice given, and any short-notice cancellation payments. The Act received royal assent in December 2025 and phases in through 2026 and 2027, introducing guaranteed-hours offers for workers on zero-hours and low-hours arrangements, reasonable advance notice of shifts, and statutory payments when shifts are cancelled or curtailed at short notice. Most current rota tools don’t yet automate this. Any system that records shift offers and worker responses with timestamps gives you the documentary evidence to defend a tribunal claim. RotaCloud, Planday, and Deputy are actively building toward ERA 2025 compliance features; free coordination tools record the data even if they don’t interpret it.

What’s the cheapest app for a small casual pool?

It depends on your size. For pools under 10 casuals, Connecteam’s Small Business Plan is free for life with full feature access. For up to 30 casuals, Sling’s free plan covers scheduling and chat. For unlimited casuals, Zelos is free with no per-person fees, capped at 25 concurrent active shifts. Findmyshift is genuinely free forever for up to 5 staff. None of the paid AU/UK compliance-aware tools have a free plan.

Can I run my casual pool on WhatsApp?

Plenty of small operators do, and it works fine under about 30 workers. It stops working when you can’t track who confirmed which shift, hours get lost or disputed, and last-minute changes get buried in group chats. WhatsApp also creates real privacy and compliance issues. Workers see each other’s phone numbers, conversations sit on personal devices, and there’s no audit trail of shift offers. The move from WhatsApp to a dedicated app is one of the most common upgrades AU and UK operators make in their first two years of trading.

What’s the difference between Zelos and Deputy?

Both handle shift coordination for casual workforces, but they take different architectural approaches. Zelos is a signup board: admins post shifts and workers claim them, with no top-down assignment. Deputy is a rostering tool: admins build the rota and assign workers, with optional open shifts for cover. Zelos charges per organisation regardless of pool size; Deputy charges per worker. Zelos is built in the EU with GDPR compliance by default; Deputy is AU-origin with mature AU award interpretation. The simple framing: Zelos fits operators who want workers to self-select from a pool; Deputy fits operators who want to build a rota themselves and have automatic award compliance underneath.

How do I choose between Deputy, RosterElf, and Planday?

All three are paid, AU or UK-strong, and built for shift-based businesses with casual employees. RosterElf is the most Australian-specific: award interpretation is core, payroll integrates natively with Xero and MYOB, and support is all AU-based. Deputy is also AU-origin but operates internationally, with strong Fair Work coverage in AU and growing UK support; it’s the most established product with the largest integration ecosystem. Planday is now Xero-owned and positioned for UK and EU hospitality, with the tightest Xero integration of the three and competitive per-worker pricing. For Australian operators, RosterElf or Deputy depending on whether you want AU-native or international. For UK and EU operators already on Xero, Planday. For UK and EU operators not on Xero, Deputy.

Do these apps handle payroll for casual workers?

Most operations apps don’t, by design. Payroll is heavily regulated and varies by jurisdiction, so most coordination tools export hours and hand off to dedicated payroll providers (Xero Payroll, MYOB, Sage, QuickBooks, PayCaptain). Zelos exports via CSV or webhooks. Sling has CSV exports and limited payroll integrations on paid plans. Connecteam integrates with Gusto, QuickBooks, and Xero. On the paid side, Deputy and Planday both integrate with the major payroll providers in their markets, and Deputy AU includes a native payroll add-on.

Are any of these free for very small operations?

Yes. Three offer permanent free plans worth using for genuinely small operations: Zelos (unlimited workers, 25 concurrent active shifts, full chat), Connecteam (up to 10 workers, full feature access across all hubs), and Sling (up to 30 workers, scheduling and chat). Findmyshift is free for up to 5 staff with limited features. The paid AU/UK compliance-aware tools (Deputy, RosterElf, RotaCloud, Planday) all offer free trials of 15-31 days but no permanent free plan.


Zelos handles casual staff coordination with shift signup, admin-supervised messaging, member profiles with skills targeting, hour tracking, and CSV export for payroll handoff. The standard plan is free for everyone with no per-person pricing, and Pro starts at $99/month flat regardless of pool size.