
Property management teams today are managing increasingly complex responsibilities across leasing, tenant communications, maintenance coordination, compliance, financial operations, and building infrastructure. As portfolios continue to grow, technology platforms are playing a larger role in helping operators improve efficiency while maintaining visibility across day-to-day operations.
During the recent Property Management category showcase, several technology providers demonstrated how they are addressing different aspects of property management workflows, from rental operations and commercial property administration to EV charging infrastructure and portfolio analytics.
Here is a closer look at 4 property management solutions serving different segments of the industry.
As electric vehicle adoption continues to grow, property owners are increasingly evaluating how to support charging demand across residential and commercial assets.
SWTCH Energy focuses on scalable EV charging infrastructure through its charging intelligence platform, SWTCH Cortex. The company's technology combines OCPP-certified software with charging hardware designed to operate efficiently within existing electrical systems.
A key component of the platform is intelligent load management, which helps property owners expand charging capacity without requiring significant electrical infrastructure upgrades. SWTCH currently supports more than 25,000 deployed chargers across residential communities, commercial buildings, municipal networks, and transportation corridors throughout North America.
Avail is designed for independent landlords seeking a centralized platform to manage rental operations from listing to rent collection.
The platform combines tenant marketing, applicant screening, lease execution, rent collection, maintenance coordination, and tenant communications within a single dashboard. For tenants, Avail provides online rent payments, maintenance request management, and credit-building opportunities through rent reporting.
The company positions itself as an all-in-one rental management platform aimed at simplifying property operations while helping landlords maintain direct relationships with tenants. More than one million landlords have used Avail to manage rental properties.
Hemlane approaches property management through a combination of software, automation, and service support.
The platform supports listing syndication, tenant screening, digital leasing, online rent collection, maintenance coordination, and tenant communications throughout the rental lifecycle. In addition to software capabilities, Hemlane provides operational support services designed to help landlords and property managers manage leasing and maintenance activities more efficiently.
By centralizing conversations, payments, maintenance requests, and property records, the company aims to reduce administrative workload while helping users maintain operational visibility across their portfolios.
Re-Leased focuses on commercial real estate operations by bringing lease administration, property management workflows, compliance tracking, reporting, and financial data into a unified platform.
The company has embedded AI capabilities through Credia AI, which assists users by analyzing lease documents, extracting operational information, reviewing communications, and surfacing answers with supporting references. The platform is designed to support workflows including rent reviews, arrears management, compliance tracking, tenant communications, and operational reporting.
Re-Leased also integrates with accounting systems such as Xero, Sage Intacct, QuickBooks, and NetSuite, allowing operators to connect property operations with existing financial workflows.
Taken together, these products show that property management software is becoming more specialized and more strategic at the same time. Some platforms are solving for landlord simplicity, some for commercial operational depth, and some for infrastructure readiness.
The common thread is clear: property management technology is moving toward systems that reduce administrative burden, centralize data, and give operators more control over performance. In an industry where speed, visibility, and tenant experience increasingly matter, that shift is likely to shape the next phase of platform adoption.