Free event staff scheduling apps in 2026: 7 honest options for event teams
Most event-specific scheduling tools charge from day one. These seven general workforce platforms have genuine free plans that work for event teams in 2026, with the limits stated honestly so you can pick what fits.
Feature comparison
| Product | Free team size | Multi-location on free | Scheduling horizon | Built-in team chat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zelos | Unlimited | ✓ | Unlimited | ✓ |
| Connecteam | 10 users | ✓ | Unlimited | ✓ |
| Sling | 30 users | ✓ | Unlimited | ✓ |
| Homebase | 20 employees | No (1 location) | Unlimited | ✓ |
| 7shifts | 15 employees | No (1 location) | Unlimited | ✕ |
| ZoomShift | 20 users | No (1 location) | 2 weeks | ✓ |
| Findmyshift | 5 employees | Yes (up to 10 teams) | 1 week | ✕ |
If you coordinate event staff, your scheduling tool needs to handle the things that make event work different: irregular hours, last-minute changes, and a rotating cast of freelancers who only work some of your events. The dedicated event-staffing platforms (Quickstaff, Workstaff, Event Staff App, Liveforce) are built for agencies with budgets and charge from day one. None have free plans worth the name in 2026.
What does work for event teams without spending anything: general workforce scheduling tools with genuinely free tiers. The seven below all have real free plans, with the limits stated upfront so you can pick what fits your size and how you operate.
Zelos Team Management
Event agencies with rotating freelance rosters
Zelos takes a signup-board approach to event staffing. Coordinators post shifts (location, role, skills required, start time), team members get push notifications, and whoever is available and qualified claims the role first. No algorithmic assignment, no per-person fees, no salaried-employee assumptions baked into the product. The whole thing runs on the principle that the person doing the work is the best one to decide if they can take it.
Built-in chat is part of the product, not a bolt-on. Each shift has its own conversation thread, so the venue address, dress code, call time, and contact for the floor manager stay attached to the job rather than scattered across group texts and emails. Member contact information is hidden from other members by design, which keeps the workspace professional when you’re coordinating a roster of freelancers who didn’t sign up to have their phone numbers in a shared directory.
- Free plan: Unlimited team members and admins, 25 concurrent active shifts, last 100 shifts in the archive, 10,000 chat messages.
- What’s paid: Bulk CSV shift upload, dynamic member segments that update automatically as profiles change (auto-update by skills, location, or any custom field), full shift archive, custom team URL. Pro at $99/month annual ($119/month monthly), flat regardless of roster size.
- Communication: Built-in team chat (per-shift threads plus direct messages), admin-supervised. Member contact information is hidden by default. No customer-facing SMS.
- Best for: Event agencies, catering companies, festival organisers, and brand activation teams running a rotating freelance roster, where per-person pricing would scale awkwardly as the roster grows beyond what any single event needs.
- Watch out for: No integrated time tracking or payroll export, no GPS check-ins. Zelos is the scheduling and communication layer; you’ll need separate tools for hours-based payroll if your team is paid by the hour rather than per shift.
- Platforms: Native iOS, Android, and web. EU-built and GDPR-compliant by default.
Connecteam
Tiny event ops wanting full operations and comms
Connecteam is an all-in-one workforce platform with a genuinely generous free plan: up to 10 users get the full Small Business plan, which includes the Operations Hub (scheduling, time clock, GPS check-ins, open shifts), the Communication Hub (team chat, announcements, surveys, knowledge base), and the HR Hub (training, documents, recognition). For an event operation that fits in 10 seats, it’s one of the most feature-rich free plans in any category.
The product is mobile-first, designed for deskless and frontline teams. The drag-and-drop scheduler handles open shifts, shift swaps, and availability tracking. GPS-enabled clock-ins prevent the “I forgot to log my hours” calls after every event. AI-assisted scheduling is on paid plans.
- Free plan: Up to 10 users, full access to all three Hubs (Operations, Communication, HR). No time limit.
- Paid plans: Basic Operations Hub at $29/month for up to 30 users, then $0.50/user/month per additional user. Bundle plans across hubs from there.
- Communication: Full Communication Hub on free, including team chat, direct messages, announcements, surveys, and knowledge base.
- Best for: A small event ops team (under 10 people) that wants scheduling, time tracking, GPS check-ins, and team communication in one app rather than stitching together separate tools.
- Watch out for: The 10-user cap on free is tight for any event agency that flexes beyond a core team, even if only some are active for each event. The jump to paid is reasonable but the cap binds quickly.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Sling
Small event teams up to 30 staff
Sling is a clean, mobile-first shift planning app owned by Toast (the restaurant POS company). The free plan covers up to 30 users with no time limit and includes the core scheduling toolkit: shift creation, schedule templates, open shifts that staff can claim, shift swaps, time-off requests, availability tracking, and private messaging between team members. It’s a focused product without much beyond scheduling.
The free plan is genuinely useful for smaller event teams. The hard 30-user cap is what to plan around: exceed it and you’re moved to Premium ($1.70/user/month annual) with same-day prorated charges. Time tracking, labour cost reporting, and kiosk clock-in are all paid plan features.
- Free plan: 30 users, full scheduling functionality, shift swaps, open shifts, private messaging, time-off requests.
- Paid plans: Premium at $1.70/user/month annual adds mobile time tracking and labour cost tools. Business at $3.40/user/month annual adds kiosk time tracking, compliance reporting, and PTO management.
- Communication: Built-in private messaging (direct and group) on the free plan. Customer-facing SMS isn’t part of the product.
- Best for: A small event company or catering operation with a core team of up to 30 staff that needs straightforward scheduling without time tracking complexity.
- Watch out for: Hard 30-user cap on free, no time tracking on free. Mobile app sync delays come up in reviews. Shift swap visibility was restricted to managers in 2024, which some teams found limiting.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Homebase
Single-venue US-based event companies
Homebase is built for hourly and shift-based teams, mostly in US hospitality and retail. The free Basic plan covers one location with up to 20 employees and includes scheduling, time tracking, team messaging, and POS integration (Toast, Square, Clover, Shopify). Reviewers consistently praise the clean interface and fast onboarding. For a single-venue event company (a wedding venue, a small catering outfit, a regular pop-up), the free tier covers the core operation.
The per-location pricing model is the catch. Most event work happens across multiple venues, and Homebase charges per physical address on paid plans. The free plan limits you to one location. Add a second venue and you’re on Essentials at $20-25/location/month or higher.
- Free plan: 1 location, up to 20 employees, basic scheduling, time tracking, team messaging, POS integration.
- Paid plans: Essentials around $20-25/location/month adds unlimited employees, advanced scheduling, departments. Plus and All-In-One tiers add hiring, PTO management, labour cost tools, and HR compliance.
- Communication: Team messaging included on free (announcements and direct messages). Customer notifications aren’t part of the product.
- Best for: A wedding venue, single-location catering outfit, or event space with a regular hourly team where one physical address covers the operation.
- Watch out for: Per-location pricing penalises multi-venue event companies. US-focused (POS integrations, payroll tools) and the integration list is shorter than Deputy or When I Work.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
7shifts
Catering and hospitality event teams
7shifts is restaurant-and-hospitality scheduling software, which makes it a natural fit for catering companies and food-led event operations. The free Comp plan covers 1 location with up to 15 employees and includes drag-and-drop scheduling, a time clock, availability tracking, time-off requests, one-way announcements, and POS integrations with Toast, Square, Clover, and others. Built specifically around tip pooling, prep notes, and shift roles for food service work.
The free plan is genuinely useful for a small catering team or a wedding catering outfit running events out of a single kitchen. Real team chat (vs one-way announcements) is on the paid Essentials plan at $39.99/month per location.
- Free plan: 1 location, 15 employees, scheduling, time clock, availability, time-off requests, one-way announcements, POS integrations.
- Paid plans: Essentials $39.99/month/location (up to 30 employees, adds team chat and advanced scheduling). Pro $79.99/month/location (60 employees, adds labour compliance and PTO accruals). Premium $134.99/month/location (unlimited employees, AI auto-scheduling).
- Communication: Free plan has one-way announcements only. Real two-way team chat starts at the Essentials paid tier.
- Best for: Catering companies, wedding food services, and hospitality event teams that already think in restaurant terms (POS systems, tip pooling, food cost vs labour cost).
- Watch out for: Restaurant-specific assumptions throughout the product. If your event work isn’t food-led, 7shifts will feel like it’s solving problems you don’t have. Tip pooling, prep notes, and section assignments matter for food service, not for an AV crew or brand activation team.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
ZoomShift
Small event teams with short planning cycles
ZoomShift is a straightforward shift scheduler with a free Essentials plan for up to 20 users at one location. The product is intentionally simple: drag-and-drop scheduling, basic team communication, shift reminders via text and email, and time-off requests. Reviewers consistently mention how easy it is to learn, and one Capterra reviewer specifically uses it for a non-profit music venue running 90+ events per year with 40+ student staff.
The free plan has one notable constraint for event work: schedules are limited to two weeks in advance. For event teams planning months ahead, this means paying $1/user/month for the Starter plan to get an unlimited scheduling horizon (which also adds time tracking, PTO, break trackers, and the manager logbook).
- Free plan: Up to 20 users, 1 location, basic scheduling, communication, shift reminders. Two-week scheduling horizon.
- Paid plans: Starter at $1/user/month annual adds time tracking, PTO management, unlimited scheduling horizon, manager logbook. Premium at $2/user/month annual adds geofencing, overtime warnings, customisable roles and access permissions.
- Communication: Basic team communication on free (announcements and messages). More structured communication tools on paid plans.
- Best for: A small event operation or venue with a roster up to 20 people that books events one or two weeks ahead, where the scheduling horizon isn’t a blocker.
- Watch out for: Two-week scheduling cap on the free plan is the real constraint for event teams. Time tracking is paid-only. Communication features are basic compared to Connecteam or Sling.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Findmyshift
Micro-teams of 5 or fewer
Findmyshift has been running since 2004 and has hosted over 200 million shifts. The free plan is restricted to 5 employees but is genuinely featureful within that cap: drag-and-drop scheduling, integrated time clock, timesheets, shift swaps and requests (with manager approval), and notifications via email, SMS, or push. You can have up to 10 separate teams on the free plan, which is unusual.
The trade-offs are scope. Free scheduling is limited to one week forward and one week back. There are no templates, no real-time reporting, and no payroll calculations. If your event work fits these constraints (a small recurring crew, weekly planning, simple payroll done elsewhere), the free plan is workable indefinitely.
- Free plan: Up to 5 employees per team, up to 10 teams, time clock, shift swaps, notifications via email/SMS/push. One week forward, one week back scheduling.
- Paid plans: From $27/month for teams of 6 or more, with templates, payroll calculations, real-time reporting, and longer scheduling horizons.
- Communication: Notifications via email, SMS, and push, but no in-app team chat. Communication is one-way (manager to staff).
- Best for: A micro-event-team (a small recurring catering crew, a wedding photography duo, a two-person event production outfit) where 5 staff is the actual size, not a constraint to plan around.
- Watch out for: The 5-employee cap is firm. The one-week scheduling horizon makes it unsuitable for event teams planning further out. No in-app messaging means you’ll be using texts or WhatsApp for the conversation around each event.
- Platforms: iOS, Android, web.
Still narrowing down? Our event staffing app overview covers the specific challenges of coordinating temporary event crews. If your operation is closer to traditional shift work than event-by-event coordination, free staff scheduling software covers different territory.