Can MotoPress Appointment Booking actually run a real service business inside WordPress, or is it best treated as a starter plugin that you outgrow within a year? And which plan really makes sense — the free Lite version, the standalone Pro at $49/year, or the Bundle that wraps in all 7 paid add-ons?
That is the buying decision behind this MotoPress Appointment Booking review. I tested the plugin on the official MotoPress demo (Lotus Spa theme + Appointment Booking v2.4.3, the December 5, 2025 build) with Pro features visible. I created a Schedule, an Employee (Anna Lin), a Location (Lotus Spa Brooklyn), and a €120 60-minute deep-tissue massage Service, then completed the entire customer booking flow on the front-end as two real customers — Service → Date & Time → Cart → Checkout → Payment, then verified each booking landed in admin Calendar, Bookings, Payments and Customers with the right service, employee, date, customer, status and amount. I tested 45 checklist items across 17 admin modules, cross-checked live pricing on motopress.com/products/appointment-booking, read the WordPress.org listing (4.4/5 from 19 reviews, 2,000+ active installs), the official refund policy, the WPMayor review and recent community threads.
The short version: MotoPress Appointment Booking is a credible free-first WordPress booking plugin with a generous Lite tier and a fair Pro upgrade — but the small install base, the indirect service-to-location wiring, and the heavy reliance on paid add-ons for SMS, video conferencing and invoicing are real caveats worth weighing.
What Is MotoPress Appointment Booking?
MotoPress Appointment Booking is a self-hosted WordPress plugin built by MotoPress (also known as JetMonsters), the Ukrainian WordPress products company best known for its Hotel Booking plugin. It turns a regular WordPress site into a multi-step appointment scheduler for service businesses — beauty salons, barbershops, therapists, doctors, tutors, photographers, fitness instructors, law firms, equipment rental companies. Its commercial pitch is value at the entry level: the free Lite version on WordPress.org includes unlimited services, employees and locations, and the paid Pro version unlocks online payments and Google Calendar sync. The plugin lives inside the standard WordPress admin sidebar with a dedicated "Appointments" menu group.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Review Quick Verdict
MotoPress Appointment Booking is a strong fit if you want a free-to-start WordPress booking plugin with a clean multi-step customer flow and you are comfortable with classic WordPress UX. Its biggest strength is the genuinely useful Lite tier and the fair Pro pricing; its biggest caveat is the small install base (2,000+) versus mainstream alternatives plus the indirect service-to-location wiring that confuses first-time admins.
Criteria
Verdict
Best for
WordPress-first service businesses that want a free starting point with a credible upgrade path to a single-site Pro license
Starting price
Free Lite (unlimited sites); Pro from $49/year for 1 site or $149 lifetime; Bundle from $99/year or $199 lifetime
Free plan / trial
Yes — full free Lite tier on WordPress.org with unlimited services, employees and locations; 30-day money-back guarantee on paid plans (conditions apply)
Update frequency
Historically active through 2025, but the latest WordPress.org release at the time of review was v2.4.3, last updated about 5 months ago
Most valuable features
Multi-step booking widget with auto-skip of empty steps, Add-to-Calendar shortcuts (Google / Apple / Outlook / Yahoo) on the confirmation page, deposit + group booking + buffer time on the Service form, per-employee Google Calendar sync (Pro), generous free Lite tier
UI/UX / ease of use score
6.5/10
Feature richness score
6.8/10 (with Pro features visible; paid add-ons reviewed as separate extensions)
Product performance
7.5/10
Product rating
4.4/5 from 19 reviews on WordPress.org; smaller footprint than mainstream WP booking plugins
MotoPress Appointment Booking Features & Functionality
MotoPress Appointment Booking ships a focused, mid-sized feature set — narrower than the all-inclusive bundles of newer competitors but solid on the basics every service business needs. I tested 45 features across 17 admin modules in the official demo, and below are the most important findings.
1. Multi-step front-end booking widget
The booking widget is the heart of MotoPress Appointment Booking. It is a multi-step wizard rendered as the universal [mpa_appointment_form] shortcode (also a Gutenberg block, an Elementor widget, and a Divi module). The default flow is Service → Date & Time → Cart → Checkout → Payment, with redundant steps auto-skipped — when only one employee is eligible for a service, the Employee step disappears completely. In testing, the Service step exposed Category / Service / Location / Employee dropdowns; selecting "60-Minute Deep Tissue Massage" enabled the Next button cleanly.
2. Date & time selection
The Date step renders a calendar grid (May 2026 in this test). Disabled past dates are greyed out, available dates are tappable. Picking a date instantly loads time slots as a button grid — 9:00 am, 9:30 am … through 4:00 pm in 30-minute steps based on the schedule's working hours and the service's duration plus buffers. Selecting a slot enables Next. The grid is responsive and felt fast; the only awkward part is that there is no clear "selected slot" highlight beyond a subtle button state change.
3. Customer details & checkout
The Checkout step ships with Name, Email, Phone (with a country-code selector that defaulted to US +1 in my test) and a Notes textarea. The defaults are intentionally minimal — admins who need extra fields can either configure the visible field set in the shortcode parameters or buy the Checkout Fields Editor add-on ($49/year) for a full custom field builder.
4. Payment + booking confirmation
The Payment step lists every active gateway as a radio choice with a short description. In this Pro-features-enabled demo I saw "Pay on-site" and "Direct bank transfer"; once Stripe and PayPal are configured in Settings → Payments those appear here too. Square and WooCommerce gateways require their respective add-ons. After clicking Reserve, the booking moved cleanly to the success step.
The post-submit confirmation is a quiet but useful detail in the category: a "You've successfully made a booking. Thank you! " headline, the service summary, and four "Add to your calendar" shortcuts (Google, Apple, Outlook, Yahoo) inline. Most competitors leave calendar shortcuts to the email; landing them on the confirmation page can help reduce no-shows.
5. Admin Calendar
The admin Calendar exposes Day / Week / Month / Agenda views with a view-mode dropdown, plus filters for Service, Employee, Location and Status. Each booking renders as a coloured block; the colour comes from the per-service Appearance setting. In testing, my May 4 11:00 am – 12:00 pm appointment with Anna Lin showed up immediately in the May 4 cell. The one ergonomic gap is that Calendar does not support drag-and-drop reschedule — to change a booking's date or time you have to open the booking record and edit it.
6. Admin Bookings list
The Bookings page is a standard WordPress datatable with columns for ID, Service, Date / Time, Employee, Price, Paid, Status, Customer, Email, Phone and Date created. My test booking landed cleanly: #811 / 60-Minute Deep Tissue Massage / May 4 2026 11:00 am – 12:00 pm / Anna Lin / €120 / Paid: €0 / Confirmed / Hannah Müller. Filters cover the standard set; an "Add New" button supports manual booking creation from the backend (a Pro feature).
7. Services, Employees, Locations & Schedules
These four custom post types are MotoPress's data backbone. The Service edit form is the deepest: it exposes Service Settings (price, duration, custom time step, buffer time before / after, min advance booking, max advance booking), Group Booking (min / max attendees, multiply price), Appearance (colour for the calendar), Eligible Employees, Deposit Settings (fixed or percentage), and Notification Notices. The Employee form covers Contact Information, Social Networks, Additional Information, and the per-employee Google Calendar OAuth panel (Pro). The Location form is a simple title + address record.
The Schedule form is where the model gets unusual: rather than living on the Employee, working hours live on a separate Schedule post type that links one Employee to one Main Location. The Timetable metabox supports per-day rows with Day, Start time, End time, Activity Type (Working hours / Lunchtime / Break) and an All-day toggle. Days Off and Custom Working Days are separate metaboxes. This separation is powerful — one employee can have different schedules at different locations — but it creates an indirection that first-time admins find confusing. WPMayor's review flagged the same issue: "you can't seem to do is directly associate a service with a specific location." In practice you tie a service to a location through the Eligible Employees and their Schedules.
8. Coupons & deposits
The Coupons custom post type supports fixed-amount and percentage codes, expiration dates, usage limits, and per-service eligibility. Deposits are configured per service (fixed amount or percentage of the price) and the customer pays the deposit at booking, with the balance collected on-site or via a separate payment method. Both are included in the free Lite tier.
9. Notifications
Notifications are a custom post type. Each notification has a Type (Email / SMS), a Trigger Event (Booking placed / Booking canceled / Payment completed / Before-after appointment), a Trigger time relative to the event (period + unit + operator), Recipients (admin / employee / customer / custom), and the Subject + body templates with placeholder support (%customer_first_name%, %booking_id%, etc.). The same form drives email and SMS notifications — SMS sending requires the Twilio SMS add-on ($59/year) and Twilio account credentials. There are no built-in WhatsApp or Telegram channels.
10. Customers
A customer record is created automatically on the first booking with that email address. The Customers list shows Name, Email, Phone, Bookings count, Date Registered, and Last Active. Both Hannah Müller and Erik Andersson auto-appeared after my two test bookings. Customer detail pages show all past and upcoming bookings; manual creation is also supported (Pro feature).
11. Payments
The Payments page mirrors Bookings. Each payment shows ID, Status, Amount, related Booking, Method, Transaction ID, Customer and Date. My test payment landed as Payment #812 — On Hold / €120 / Booking #811 / Pay on-site — exactly what a real production install sees when the customer chooses an on-site method. Connecting Stripe, PayPal or Direct Bank Transfer activates them as additional gateway radios on the front-end Payment step. Live charge flow is provider-driven and depends on configuring the gateway keys in Settings → Payments.
12. Analytics
The Analytics dashboard tracks Revenue over time, total Bookings, Popular Services, Coupon Usage, and Payment Gateway breakdown — each as a small chart with date-range and entity filters (employee / service / location / status). It is functional but visually plain compared to dedicated SaaS dashboards. For deeper attribution, MotoPress sells a Google Analytics add-on ($39/year) that pushes ecommerce events into GA4.
13. Settings
Settings is organized into six tabs: General, Emails, Notifications, Payments, Integrations, Misc. General exposes Currency, Currency Position, Decimals, Time Format, Date Format, Timezone, Default Time Step, Booking Confirmation Mode (auto-confirm vs manual approval), Booking Cancellation Mode, and Booking Completion Time (the abandonment timeout). Payments exposes the per-gateway enable toggles and credentials. Integrations exposes the Google Calendar OAuth (Pro). Misc covers data clean-up and developer toggles.
14. Add-ons & Extensions
The Extensions page is where the Bundle's value pitch becomes obvious. Seven official add-ons are listed: WooCommerce Payments ($79/year), Twilio SMS ($59/year), Google Analytics ($39/year), Square Payments ($49/year), Checkout Fields Editor ($49/year), PDF Invoices ($49/year), Video Conferencing ($49/year). Bought separately at retail they exceed $370/year — the Bundle's $99/year price is genuinely competitive if you need three or more.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Ease of Use / UI & UX
MotoPress Appointment Booking sits firmly in the "classic WordPress" UX camp. The admin is the standard sidebar + datatable + metabox layout, not a SaaS-style top-tab dashboard. For experienced WordPress admins this is a positive — everything works the way WordPress expects. For non-technical buyers, parts of the setup feel less guided than newer competitors.
1. UI / UX
The admin is functional and unsurprising. Datatables are searchable, sortable and filterable, edit screens use the WordPress metabox pattern, and the "Appointments" menu group exposes 17 sub-items for direct navigation. There is no in-app top-tab navigation, no live-preview Customize module, and no native mobile app for staff or admins. Compared to a SaaS-style WP booking plugin, the gap is real — the experience is closer to a 2018-style WordPress plugin than to a 2026 SaaS app.
2. Setup
From a fresh, empty install, building a working booking flow requires creating a Schedule, an Employee, a Location, linking the Schedule to the Employee + Location, configuring weekly working hours, creating a Service with the right Eligible Employees, and adding the [mpa_appointment_form] shortcode to a page. That is 30–45 minutes of admin work for someone who knows what they are doing. The Setup Wizard added in v2.3.0 (April 2025) is meant to walk first-timers through this in a single guided flow; it is a meaningful improvement over older versions.
3. Schedule timetable editor
The single biggest friction point in the admin is the Schedule Timetable editor. Clicking the "Add" button opens an inline edit row with Day / Start time / End time / Activity Type / Location selects. To commit the row you have to click the same "Add" button a second time — there is no dedicated "Save period" affordance. Once you understand the pattern it is fine; first-time admins reliably find this confusing.
4. Service-to-location indirection
Services don't have a direct Location field. To make a service available at a location, you assign one or more Employees to the service, and those employees must have a Schedule whose Main Location matches. The model is more flexible than a flat service-to-location field — but it means a single-location business has to configure both an Employee and a Schedule before any service is bookable. WPMayor flagged this exact friction in their review.
5. Front-end widget polish
The front-end widget is where MotoPress is at its best. The multi-step wizard is clean, the time-slot grid is fast, and the auto-skip of redundant steps (no Employee step when there's only one eligible employee) feels considered. Add-to-Calendar shortcuts on the confirmation page are a small but high-value touch.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Performance
MotoPress Appointment Booking performed well in the official demo. Because it lives inside WordPress and uses standard AJAX flows, day-to-day performance follows your hosting more than the plugin itself.
1. Admin page speed
Core admin pages — Bookings, Calendar, Customers, Services, Notifications, Settings — loaded in ~1.5–3 seconds on the demo. Switching between modules felt snappy.
2. Front-end widget responsiveness
The booking widget transitioned through Service → Date/Time → Cart → Checkout → Payment without noticeable lag. The time-slot button grid rendered instantly when I switched dates, and the post-submit confirmation loaded quickly.
3. Stability signals
Both my end-to-end test bookings completed without console errors or visible failures. Recent WordPress.org reviews are overwhelmingly positive on stability; one v2.4.3 release-note explicitly fixed a Google Calendar connection issue that some users reported in mid-2025.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Support, Documentation & Learning Resources
MotoPress Appointment Booking support is offered via email and a ticket system on motopress.com plus the WordPress.org community forum for free Lite users. Pro and Bundle buyers get priority technical support included for the license period.
Public ratings sit in the "good" band — 4.4/5 from 19 reviews on WordPress.org. Recent positive reviews praise quick support response and the flexibility of the system; the older negative-review minority on Trustpilot complains primarily about refund requests and dismissive tone in escalation threads. Documentation is genuinely strong: motopress.com/documentation/wordpress/plugins/appointment-booking/ covers the core plugin and every paid add-on with screenshots, the YouTube channel hosts 25+ tutorial videos, and developers get a separate Code Reference at motopress.github.io/appointment-code-reference plus a published Style Kit on GitHub.
MotoPress Appointment Booking User Reviews & Reputation
I read all 19 WordPress.org reviews, the Trustpilot pattern recap from the parent motopress.com domain, and recent posts in the official MotoPress forum (76 topics / 234 replies, last activity January 2026).
Overall impression: Buyers consistently like the free-first model and the quality of the customer-facing booking widget. Heavy users either upgrade to Pro/Bundle or move to a more feature-rich competitor — there is little middle ground.
Most praised strengths: the truly useful free Lite tier (unlimited services, employees and locations), the polished multi-step front-end widget, the clarity of the documentation and YouTube tutorials, the responsiveness of email/ticket support for paying users, and the breadth of paid add-ons available individually.
Most criticized weaknesses: the small install base (2,000+ active installs vs 100,000+ for mainstream WP booking plugins) creates a perception risk; the strict refund policy and occasional dismissive support tone in escalations show up repeatedly on Trustpilot; advanced features like white-labeling, drag-to-reschedule on the calendar, and a native mobile app are simply absent; and SMS / video conferencing / PDF invoices are paid add-ons rather than core features.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Pricing & Value
MotoPress sells the Appointment Booking plugin as a free Lite tier on WordPress.org, a paid Standalone Pro on motopress.com, and a Bundle that wraps in the seven official add-ons. The figures below were verified live on motopress.com/products/appointment-booking during this review.
Lite (free) : $0 annual; no lifetime price; unlimited sites. Includes core scheduling, unlimited services / employees / locations, custom notifications, customer accounts, deposits, coupons, customer calendar export shortcuts, page-builder blocks, CSV export, multi-service + group booking. No online payment gateways (Pay-on-site only), no Google Calendar sync, no manual booking from backend.
Standalone Pro — 1 site : $49 / year or $149 lifetime for 1 site. Includes Lite plus Stripe + PayPal + Direct Bank Transfer payment gateways, Google Calendar 2-way sync for staff, manual customer registration from backend, multiple notification recipients. Priority email/ticket support.
Standalone Pro — 25 sites : $99 / year ; no lifetime price; up to 25 sites. Same as Pro 1 site, multi-site licence.
Bundle (plugin + 7 add-ons) — 1 site : $99 / year or $199 lifetime for 1 site. Includes Pro plus WooCommerce Payments, Twilio SMS, Google Analytics, Square Payments, Checkout Fields Editor, PDF Invoices, Video Conferencing.
Bundle — 25 sites : $149 / year or $399 lifetime for up to 25 sites. Bundle, multi-site licence.
The free Lite plan is a real product, not a demo, which is rare in this category. It lets a small service business take genuine bookings on Pay-on-site only before paying a cent. Once you need an online payment gateway, the upgrade to Pro at $49/year is fair — and the $149 lifetime sticker pays back inside ~3 years versus the annual licence. The Bundle is worth the math the moment you need three or more of the paid add-ons; buying SMS + Video Conferencing + PDF Invoices separately at retail already costs $157/year.
The official refund policy is a 30-day money-back guarantee with conditions. Refunds are honoured if the buyer hasn't downloaded the item or it doesn't work as described, and the buyer must first open a support ticket. Refunds are explicitly denied for buyer's-remorse, accidental purchase, or unmet personal expectations. MotoPress Membership refunds are always refused. This is stricter than the no-questions-asked refunds some competitors advertise — worth knowing before you buy lifetime.
MotoPress Appointment Booking Pros and Cons
MotoPress Appointment Booking gets a lot right, but it is not a universal recommendation — particularly for buyers who want a SaaS-style admin or a native mobile app.
Pros
Genuinely useful free Lite tier : Unlimited services, employees and locations on the free plan, with Pay-on-site bookings working out of the box. Few WP booking plugins ship a free tier this generous.
Fair Pro pricing with a lifetime option : $49/year or $149 lifetime for a single site is competitive; the Bundle at $99/year wraps in seven add-ons that retail for over $370/year.
Clean multi-step booking widget : The Service → Date/Time → Cart → Checkout → Payment flow is fast, auto-skips redundant steps (e.g., Employee step when only one is eligible), and the confirmation page exposes Add-to-Calendar shortcuts (Google / Apple / Outlook / Yahoo) inline.
Strong documentation : 25+ YouTube tutorials, a screenshot-rich knowledge base, a developer Code Reference and a published Style Kit on GitHub make onboarding and customisation easier than for many niche WordPress plugins.
Cons
Small install base : 2,000+ active installs on WordPress.org puts MotoPress well behind mainstream WP booking plugins on social-proof signals — a real consideration for buyers who weigh community size and longevity.
Indirect service-to-location wiring : Services aren't directly associated with a location; the link runs through Employees and their Schedules. First-time admins reliably find this confusing.
Schedule Timetable editor friction : Adding working hours requires clicking the same "Add" button twice (once to open the inline editor, once to commit). There is no dedicated Save affordance — minor but persistent UX rough edge.
Heavy add-on dependency for SMS, video meetings, PDF invoices : Each of these is a separate $39–$79/year add-on. Bundle buyers get them included; standalone Pro buyers either pay individually or commit to the Bundle.
Who Should Use MotoPress Appointment Booking?
MotoPress Appointment Booking is the right pick when you want a free-first WordPress booking plugin with a reasonable upgrade path, and you don't need a SaaS-style admin or a native mobile app.
Who Should Use It
Solo practitioners and small WordPress-first service businesses that want to start with a free, fully functional plugin and only pay when they need online payments.
Buyers who prefer lifetime licences over recurring SaaS subscriptions : $149 lifetime for Standalone Pro or $199 lifetime for the Bundle is genuinely cheaper than equivalent SaaS schedulers within ~3 years.
Multi-location businesses with employees who work different schedules at different sites : the Schedule-as-its-own-CPT model is more flexible here than a flat per-employee weekly schedule.
Operators who already use a MotoPress theme for their service-business website (Lotus Spa, Yogamo, MedMix, etc.) and want native plugin/theme integration.
Who Should Skip It
Buyers who treat install-base size as a primary trust signal : 2,000+ installs is light next to mainstream alternatives.
Teams that need a native iOS/Android app for staff to manage bookings on the go — MotoPress doesn't ship one.
Agencies that need white-labeling to rebrand the admin for clients — MotoPress doesn't expose a white-label switch.
Buyers who depend on drag-and-drop reschedule on the admin calendar — MotoPress requires editing the booking record to change date or time.
Best MotoPress Appointment Booking Alternatives
If MotoPress Appointment Booking is close but not a perfect match, these are the most relevant WordPress alternatives to compare. For the broader category view, see our full appointment booking plugin comparison .
Booknetic : Booknetic is the closest direct WordPress alternative if you want a more modern admin experience, native mobile app, white-labeling, graphical reporting, stronger form logic, and a broader commercial feature set.
Amelia : Amelia is a heavyweight WordPress booking plugin with a polished admin UI and a mature Events module. Worth a shortlist look if classes / events are central to your operation; our Amelia vs Booknetic comparison is useful if you want to compare it against Booknetic directly.
LatePoint : LatePoint is a modern WordPress booking plugin with a slick UI, lifetime licences and a clear pricing model. Good fit if you specifically prefer LatePoint's flat lifetime pricing and visual style; you can also read our Booknetic vs LatePoint comparison for a deeper side-by-side.
BookingPress : BookingPress all-inclusive paid plans bundle 60+ add-ons and 20+ payment gateways. Worth a look if you want every feature unlocked from day one — but BookingPress is not currently available on WordPress.org, so buyers should confirm how updates are delivered before purchase.
Final Verdict: Is MotoPress Appointment Booking Worth It?
MotoPress Appointment Booking is worth it when you want a free-first WordPress booking plugin with a fair upgrade path and you can live with the indirect service-to-location wiring. The booking widget converts cleanly, the Add-to-Calendar shortcuts on the confirmation page are a small but high-value detail, the deposit + group booking + buffer fields cover most service-business needs, and the documentation is strong.
It becomes a harder sell when install-base credibility, drag-to-reschedule on the calendar, white-labeling, a native mobile app, or unified WhatsApp / Telegram notifications are non-negotiable. By the time those weigh on the decision, a more feature-rich alternative like Booknetic is the rational shortlist mate to compare — native mobile app, white-labeling, graphical reporting and a more modern admin experience all included.
The biggest caveat is the install-base footprint and the strict refund policy. If both are acceptable, MotoPress Appointment Booking in 2026 is a credible WordPress booking plugin with one of the most generous free tiers in the category — especially for solo practitioners and small WordPress-first service businesses that want to start free and only pay when they need online payments.
MotoPress Appointment Booking FAQ
Is MotoPress Appointment Booking free?
Yes — there is a fully functional free Lite tier on WordPress.org with unlimited services, employees and locations, custom notifications, deposits, coupons, customer calendar export shortcuts and Pay-on-site bookings. Online payment gateways (Stripe, PayPal, Direct Bank Transfer), Google Calendar staff sync, manual booking creation from the backend and the seven official add-ons sit behind the paid Pro and Bundle plans.
How much does MotoPress Appointment Booking cost?
On the official pricing page, Standalone Pro is $49/year for a single site or $149 lifetime; Standalone Pro for up to 25 sites is $99/year. The Bundle (plugin + 7 paid add-ons) is $99/year or $199 lifetime for a single site, and $149/year or $399 lifetime for up to 25 sites. A 30-day money-back guarantee applies to paid plans, with conditions.
Does MotoPress Appointment Booking support Stripe and PayPal?
Yes — both ship with the Standalone Pro and Bundle plans. The free Lite version is limited to Pay-on-site, but Pro adds Stripe (with Bancontact, iDEAL, Giropay, SEPA Direct Debit, SOFORT, Apple Pay and Google Pay), PayPal, and Direct Bank Transfer. Square and WooCommerce-routed gateways require their respective paid add-ons.
Does MotoPress Appointment Booking sync with Google Calendar?
Yes — but two-way Google Calendar sync for staff is a Pro feature. Each employee links their personal Google Calendar via OAuth from their employee profile, and bookings sync bidirectionally. Customer-side calendar export shortcuts (Google / Apple / Outlook / Yahoo) are available on the booking confirmation page in both Lite and Pro.
Does MotoPress Appointment Booking have a mobile app?
No. MotoPress Appointment Booking does not ship a native iOS or Android mobile app — all admin and staff work runs through the WordPress admin in a browser. Booknetic is the most common alternative cited by buyers who specifically need a native staff mobile app.
What is the best MotoPress Appointment Booking alternative?
Booknetic is the closest direct WordPress alternative if you want a more modern admin experience, native mobile app, white-labeling, graphical reporting, stronger form logic and a broader commercial feature set. Amelia, LatePoint and BookingPress are also strong shortlist candidates depending on whether you weight events, lifetime pricing or all-inclusive add-on bundling most.