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ShopView adds built-in payments for heavy-duty repair shops

May 15, 2026
ShopView adds built-in payments for heavy-duty repair shops

By AI, Created 4:33 PM UTC, May 18, 2026, /AGP/ – ShopView launched Payments, an in-platform payment processing tool for diesel, truck, trailer and fleet repair shops. The feature aims to reduce reconciliation work, speed deposits and connect work orders to invoicing and QuickBooks without leaving the software.

Why it matters: - Heavy-duty repair shops often wait between finishing a job and getting paid. - ShopView’s new Payments tool is built to reduce double entry, reconciliation errors and delayed deposits. - The platform is designed to help shops keep working capital moving instead of tying it up for weeks.

What happened: - ShopView announced Payments, an integrated payment processing solution inside its shop management software. - The feature is available immediately to all ShopView users. - Existing users can activate Payments from inside their account. - New shops can start a free trial with no contract and no credit card required. - The announcement was made in Las Vegas on May 15, 2026.

The details: - Payments lets diesel, truck, trailer, heavy equipment and fleet repair shops accept credit card, ACH and fleet billing payments without leaving ShopView. - Transactions flow from work order to invoice to deposit. - Card and ACH payments are processed inside ShopView and mapped to the correct customer and job. - Deposits, fees and refunds sync to QuickBooks automatically. - Shops can accept all major credit cards with transparent per-transaction pricing. - ACH bank transfers are available for larger fleet payments at lower fees. - The system is built around fleet billing workflows, including direct fleet account invoicing, integrated approval tracking and customer portal access for self-service payments. - ShopView is a heavy-duty repair shop management platform built by former shop owners with 20+ years of collective industry experience. - ShopView serves diesel, truck, trailer, heavy equipment, fleet and mobile repair operations across North America. - The company says its software helps independent shops grow revenue by 20%+ through faster work orders, accurate technician time tracking, integrated inventory management and built-in payment processing. - ShopView says it supports shops with 3 to 50+ technicians. - ShopView holds 5.0-star ratings on G2 and Capterra. - G2 shows 30 verified reviews and Capterra shows 24 verified reviews. - The company says customers cite ease of use, speed and heavy-duty industry fit as the main reasons for switching from competitors. - Foothills Group, a Canadian heavy-duty repair operation, consolidated four legacy systems onto ShopView. - Foothills Group doubled revenue over two years on the platform and reported more than $15,000 in additional monthly revenue tied to faster invoicing and improved billing accuracy. - More information is available at the company’s website.

Between the lines: - ShopView is positioning Payments as a purpose-built alternative to general payment processors and disconnected accounting tools. - The launch also fits ShopView’s broader strategy of targeting heavy-duty repair workflows instead of adapting consumer-focused retail systems. - The customer results cited in the release are meant to show that tighter billing workflows can translate into faster cash collection and higher revenue.

What’s next: - ShopView will likely lean on Payments as a core feature for new customer acquisition and existing customer retention. - Shops that already use ShopView can now add payments without changing platforms. - The company is likely to continue pushing more fleet and repair-specific workflow tools into the platform.

The bottom line: - ShopView is trying to make payments part of the repair workflow itself, not a separate step that slows down getting paid.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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