VeloLedger vs QuickBooks: A Modern, MCP-Native Alternative

QuickBooks Online built the small-business accounting market — and earned it. But a 2026 finance team running a 20-200 person company is solving a different problem than QB Plus and Advanced were designed for.

The honest framing

QuickBooks Online is, by any measure, the most successful small-business accounting product ever shipped. Intuit reports more than 7 million customers globally on the platform, an accountant ecosystem with hundreds of thousands of ProAdvisors, and a feature surface area that has expanded steadily since the desktop era. If you're a freelancer, a sole proprietor, or a sub-$1M revenue business with a part-time bookkeeper, the question of whether to use QuickBooks is mostly a non-question — you should, and you'll be fine.

This page is not for that buyer. It's for the finance team that has outgrown the part-time bookkeeper, that has added payroll and an expense management tool and a CRM and an FP&A model, and is now noticing that the "accounting system" is really QuickBooks plus seven third-party connectors held together with Zapier and goodwill. That team is paying QuickBooks $200 a month and another $1,500 a month for the duct tape. They are the buyer who should consider VeloLedger.

We've tried to write this comparison the way we'd want one written about our product: acknowledge where the incumbent genuinely wins, be specific about where we win, and use real numbers wherever we can.

Where QuickBooks still wins

There are four things QuickBooks is unambiguously better at than VeloLedger, and we don't think pretending otherwise serves anyone.

1. The ProAdvisor and accountant ecosystem. If you walk into any CPA firm in North America and ask which accounting software they support, QuickBooks will be on the list. Intuit's ProAdvisor program has trained hundreds of thousands of accountants, and the QuickBooks Accountant interface (with reclassification tools, batch journal entries, and audit trail review built specifically for outside accountants) is genuinely excellent. If your strategy is to outsource your books entirely to a fractional CFO or a CAS practice, QuickBooks is the path of least resistance. VeloLedger is supported by a growing set of modern firms, but the ecosystem is a fraction of the size.

2. The lowest entry price point. QuickBooks Online Simple Start is $30 a month. Solopreneur is $20. There is no plan from VeloLedger that beats those numbers, and we won't pretend otherwise — VeloLedger is built for finance teams, not for one person doing their own books in 90 minutes a quarter.

3. Industry-specific app integrations. Construction, contractors, e-commerce, restaurants — QuickBooks has a deep marketplace of vertical apps that have been built and refined over a decade. If you're a 15-truck plumbing contractor running ServiceTitan, the QuickBooks integration is mature and your accountant has seen the workflow a hundred times. VeloLedger has a smaller, more curated set of native integrations and a public MCP interface, but we're not going to claim parity with the QuickBooks App Store.

4. Brand familiarity and exit value. When you sell the business or raise capital, "we use QuickBooks" is a sentence no one questions. VeloLedger still has to earn that recognition. For founders who plan to exit in the next 18 months, that's a real consideration, even if a competent acquirer will accept any clean set of books.

Where VeloLedger wins

The places VeloLedger pulls ahead are not minor refinements — they are structural differences in how the product is built, and they show up in real time-savings and real dollars.

Native MCP integration with the rest of your stack. VeloLedger speaks MCP (the Model Context Protocol) natively, which means your AI assistants — Claude, ChatGPT, internal copilots — can query the ledger directly. More importantly, VeloLedger is part of a product family. VeloPulse HRIS pushes payroll journal entries into VeloLedger automatically. Velo Expense Management posts expense reports as bills with the right GL coding the first time. Velo CRM closes deals and triggers AR invoices without a Zapier in the middle. With QuickBooks, every one of those connections is a third-party app costing $50-$300/month and breaking once a quarter.

AI auto-categorization that actually learns your chart of accounts. QuickBooks' rule engine has been around for years and is fine if you set rules manually. VeloLedger's categorization is a learned model that watches what your controller actually does and starts proposing matches with 95%+ accuracy after about two weeks. It also asks for confirmation on the edge cases instead of silently miscategorizing.

Natural-language GL queries. Ask VeloLedger "what did we spend on AWS in Q1 versus Q1 last year, broken out by BU?" and get an answer with the source transactions linked. QuickBooks requires you to build a custom report or export to Excel. This sounds like a small thing. In practice it changes how often your CFO actually looks at the numbers.

Close management included, not an add-on. VeloLedger ships with task assignments, dependencies, sign-offs, and a close calendar built into the product. QuickBooks customers typically end up running close in a spreadsheet or paying $300+/month for FloQast or Numeric. See our close checklist for the workflow.

13-week cash forecasting, native. Built into the same product, fed by your real AR, AP, payroll cadence, and recurring transactions. No separate Jirav or Cube subscription.

Audit copilot. When your auditor sends a PBC list, VeloLedger can assemble the supporting documentation automatically — tying TB balances to source documents, surfacing JE narratives, and packaging selections. This alone saves 30-60 hours during an annual audit.

Multi-entity and multi-currency in the base product. QuickBooks Advanced does not really do multi-entity — you run multiple QuickBooks files and reconcile them manually, or you upgrade to NetSuite. VeloLedger consolidates from day one.

Head-to-head comparison

CapabilityQuickBooks Online (Plus / Advanced)VeloLedger
Entry pricingPlus $99/mo · Advanced $235/mo$149/mo team plan
Multi-entity (consolidated reporting)— (separate files)Included
Multi-currencyPlus/Advanced only, limited revaluationFull reval & CTA
Close management workflowAdd-on (FloQast ~$300/mo)Included
AI auto-categorization (learning)Rule-basedLearned, COA-aware
Natural-language GL queriesIncluded
13-week cash forecastAdd-on / exportIncluded
Native HRIS integration3rd-party (Gusto, ADP via app)VeloPulse, native
Native CRM integration3rd-partyVelo CRM, native
Native expense integration3rd-party (Expensify, Ramp)Velo Expense, native
Audit copilot / PBC assemblyIncluded
Migration timen/a (you're already there)~3 business days
Canada readiness (GST/HST/PST)QBO Canada (separate product)Single product, both
Time to first close30-45 days (with setup)14-21 days
Implementation cost$0-2,000 (ProAdvisor)$0-3,500 (white glove)

Pricing — real numbers

Let's price out a representative scenario: a 10-user finance team at a 60-person company with 2 entities (US OpCo + Canadian sub) and around $5M in revenue.

QuickBooks Online Advanced path:

Effective monthly cost: ~$1,968/mo, before counting the 8-15 hours per month your controller spends reconciling sync errors between these tools.

VeloLedger path:

Effective monthly cost: ~$909/mo — and the integration tax is zero because the products share a data model.

Bottom line: For this scenario, VeloLedger is roughly $1,060/month cheaper (about $12,700/year), and that's before you count the reclaimed time from not babysitting connector failures. For a solo bookkeeper running a single $400K-revenue LLC, QuickBooks Simple Start at $30/mo will still be the right answer.

Migration story

Migrating from QuickBooks Online to VeloLedger is one of the more straightforward migrations we do, because the QB data model is well-understood and our import tooling is built for it. The standard timeline is three business days from kickoff to a fully running parallel ledger.

What we do, in order:

We do not require you to close out QuickBooks immediately — keep it as a read-only archive for as long as you want.

Who should stick with QuickBooks

Genuinely: a lot of people. If you are a sole proprietor, a freelancer, a single-location restaurant with a part-time bookkeeper, a sub-$1M services business that has no plans to grow past five employees, or a business that is already deeply embedded with a ProAdvisor you love — QuickBooks is doing what it was built to do, at a price point that reflects that. The features VeloLedger adds (multi-entity, close management, audit copilot, NL queries) won't move the needle for that business, and the modest price difference isn't worth the migration friction. Stay where you are.

The other case: if you are entirely outsourced to an external bookkeeper or CAS firm that requires QuickBooks, switching only makes sense if that firm is willing to support VeloLedger. A growing number of modern firms do, but check first.

Who should switch to VeloLedger

You should consider VeloLedger if you check any of these boxes:

If two or more of those describe you, the integration tax you're paying on top of QuickBooks is almost certainly larger than the cost of switching.

See VeloLedger on your own books

Start a free 30-day trial with your real QuickBooks data, or book a 15-minute demo to see the migration flow live.

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