Citizen queue management without the procurement cycle
Government offices are where queue management theater goes to die — long lines, paper number tickets, and citizens with no idea where they sit in the order. Most modern queue tools require a multi-month procurement, a sole-source justification memo, and a six-figure annual contract. Waitlist App is free, runs on the tablet you already own, and can be live this afternoon.
Where it works
- DMV satellites. License renewals, vehicle registration, ID corrections — different counter types, one shared queue per office.
- Permit & licensing offices. Building permits, business licenses, occupational licensing — track applicants, route to the right examiner.
- Social services intake. SNAP, TANF, unemployment intake — sensitive notes stay on the device, not in a vendor's cloud.
- City clerk & vital records. Birth certificates, marriage licenses, deed recordings.
- Court clerk windows. Filing windows, payment counters, jury check-in.
Why it lands well in public sector
The structural advantages of an offline-first PWA map cleanly onto government operating constraints. Sensitive citizen information stays on a device under your control rather than transiting to a third-party SaaS. There's no monthly per-counter fee that scales painfully across an agency. There's no SOC 2 attestation to chase before pilot, because no citizen data leaves the device in the free tier. And there's no procurement RFP — installation is the same "Add to Home Screen" flow any agency-issued tablet supports.
For broader patterns and CSAT impact, see our government office queue management guide.
How a typical office runs it
Single counter
Front-desk tablet running the app. Add citizens as they walk in. Notify by SMS when their number comes up.
Multi-counter office
Each counter has its own tablet on the free tier — or upgrade to Pro for a single shared live queue across all counters.
Multi-office agency
Each office runs independently. Pro adds dashboard analytics across locations.
Self-service kiosk
A wall-mounted tablet in kiosk mode lets citizens self-add (Pro feature with public tracking links).
Common questions
Is this Section 508 / WCAG accessible?
The PWA is built on standard web components, with semantic HTML and keyboard-navigable interactions. We track WCAG 2.1 AA conformance and welcome accessibility feedback at the app's contact form.
What about citizen data residency?
In the free tier, citizen names, phone numbers, and notes are stored in the device's browser localStorage. Nothing is transmitted to our servers. Data residency is wherever the device physically lives.
Can we customize the terminology?
Yes — the General Business preset uses neutral language, and notification templates accept custom text and the {customerName}/{locationName} placeholders.
Is there a multi-agency dashboard?
The Pro tier adds analytics; cross-agency reporting is on the Premium roadmap. For now, most agencies aggregate via the data export feature (JSON export per office, daily).
Get a counter live before close of business
Most government technology projects are measured in quarters, not hours. Procurement cycles, IT security reviews, vendor negotiations, and budget approvals routinely stretch implementations across fiscal years — all while citizens continue standing in lines and staff continue fielding frustrated phone calls about wait times. Waitlist App was built specifically to sidestep that timeline for offices ready to improve service today.
What "live before close of business" actually means
From the moment an account is created, a functional queue counter requires four configuration decisions: the counter name, the services offered, your estimated wait time per transaction, and how you want citizens notified (SMS, email, or both). For a single-counter office — a permit desk, a benefits intake window, a licensing bureau — that setup realistically takes under fifteen minutes. A staff member with basic computer literacy can configure and begin accepting walk-ins the same morning without any IT involvement.
For multi-counter offices, the process scales linearly. Adding a second counter is as fast as the first. Routing rules that send permit applications to Counter A and records requests to Counter B can be configured through the same dashboard, no backend access required. Offices that have deployed in a single afternoon typically describe the configuration process as "simpler than setting up a new email account."
The real cost of waiting to implement
Every week a queue management solution is delayed has a measurable cost. Research published in the American Customer Satisfaction Index consistently shows that federal and local government services rank among the lowest sectors for citizen satisfaction — and wait time is the single most cited driver of dissatisfaction. The same research indicates that a single negative service experience can reduce a citizen's trust in the entire agency, a reputational cost that compounds over time.
Operationally, unmanaged queues generate hidden labor costs: staff interruptions to answer "how long is the wait?" questions, rescheduled appointments when citizens abandon the line, and supervisor time spent managing complaints. Offices that have deployed lightweight queue systems report an immediate reduction in these interruptions, freeing staff to focus on transactions rather than crowd management.
A realistic same-day deployment timeline
- 9:00 AM — Account creation: Register with a government email address. No credit card required for initial setup.
- 9:15 AM — Counter configuration: Name your counter, define service types, set estimated transaction durations.
- 9:30 AM — Staff walkthrough: Show the one or two staff members who will manage the queue how to admit citizens, mark transactions complete, and pull the wait-time display onto a lobby monitor.
- 10:00 AM — Soft launch: Open the queue link or display the QR code at your intake window. Begin accepting the morning's walk-ins through the new system.
- End of day — Review: Pull the day's service metrics — average wait time, citizens served, peak hour volume — and share with your supervisor as a baseline for future reporting.
No IT ticket required
Because Waitlist App operates as a cloud-hosted service accessed through a standard web browser, there is nothing to install on agency workstations or servers. Citizens join the queue via a mobile browser link or QR code — no app download, no account creation on their end. This architecture means your IT department is not a dependency for go-live, though the platform is fully available for IT review, security documentation requests, and ATO (Authority to Operate) package support when your agency's compliance process requires it.
The objective is straightforward: citizens deserve the same quality of service experience they receive from modern private-sector businesses, and your staff deserves tools that reduce friction rather than create it. Both are achievable before the end of today's business hours.