Zoho Books

Full-featured cloud accounting platform with invoicing, banking, inventory, project tracking, and deep integration across the Zoho One ecosystem — dramatically cheaper than QuickBooks and Xero.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Zoho Books For?
  2. Invoicing & Banking
  3. Automation & Workflows
  4. Projects, Inventory & Multi-Entity
  5. Zoho One Ecosystem
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Zoho Books For?

Zoho Books is the accounting module of Zoho's vast business software suite, which includes CRM, email, helpdesk, HR, project management, and roughly forty other products. It competes directly with QuickBooks and Xero at a significantly lower price point, and it's especially strong for businesses that already use (or plan to use) other Zoho apps.

The ideal user is a small business or growing team looking for capable accounting at a lower price than the big two Western incumbents. Zoho Books delivers roughly 85-90% of QuickBooks and Xero's functionality — invoicing, banking, multi-currency, inventory, project tracking, reports — at roughly 30-50% of the price.

It's also the default pick for businesses running on Zoho One. If your CRM, email, helpdesk, and inventory are all on Zoho, adding Zoho Books completes the picture with tight integration across modules — contact records flow between CRM and Books, inventory updates between Books and Inventory, and everything reports in a unified Zoho One dashboard.

Zoho Books is less commonly used by accountants outside India, the Middle East, and parts of Asia. In the US, UK, Australia, and Canada, finding a bookkeeper who specialises in Zoho Books is harder than finding one who knows QuickBooks or Xero. For businesses that prefer to keep accounting in-house or work with a remote Zoho-friendly bookkeeper, this is fine. For businesses that rely heavily on local accountant support, it can be a friction point.

Where Zoho Books wins clearly is in price-to-feature ratio and depth of automation. Even the entry paid tier ($15/month) includes features that QuickBooks charges $65+ for. The free tier (for businesses under $50K/year revenue) is one of the most generous in the accounting category.

Invoicing & Banking

Zoho Books covers the standard invoicing and banking workflows with a modern interface, deep customisation, and the usual cloud accounting features — recurring invoices, payment links, bank feeds, reconciliation, and expense tracking.

In daily use, the invoicing experience is closer to Xero than QuickBooks in polish. The UI is clean, the client portal is well-designed, and custom branding flexibility is one of the best in the category. Banking and reconciliation work well where bank feed coverage is available, though coverage varies by region.

The main limitation is bank feed reliability in some markets. Zoho Books has strong coverage in the US, UK, Australia, India, and the Gulf, but some European and Latin American banks have limited or no direct feed support — users in those regions may end up importing CSV statements manually more often than with Xero.

Automation & Workflows

One of Zoho Books' biggest advantages over QuickBooks and Xero is the depth of built-in automation. Workflows, custom functions, and schedules let you automate repetitive bookkeeping tasks in ways that require third-party tools in other platforms.

The automation ceiling is significantly higher than QuickBooks and Xero out of the box. Where those tools typically require Zapier or a third-party add-on for complex workflows, Zoho Books handles many patterns natively. For operations-heavy small businesses, this can save both subscription costs and integration complexity.

The trade-off is that the interface for setting up automation can feel dense. Custom functions require learning Deluge, and the workflow rule builder has more options than most users need. For simple needs, it's overkill; for complex needs, it's a major advantage.

Projects, Inventory & Multi-Entity

Zoho Books includes project tracking, inventory management, and multi-entity support that on QuickBooks and Xero would require higher tiers or separate products.

This breadth of features at Zoho Books' price point is the main reason businesses choose it over QuickBooks or Xero. Project profitability alone is a QuickBooks Plus feature ($99/month); Zoho Books includes it on Standard ($15/month). Inventory, retainers, and multi-currency similarly come in at lower tiers than competitors.

The main limitation is that advanced inventory features (serial number tracking, batch tracking, landed cost, warehouse transfers) are reserved for higher tiers or require pairing with Zoho Inventory, a separate product. For businesses with complex inventory needs, the full Zoho Inventory module is worth the extra cost.

Zoho One Ecosystem

Zoho Books' biggest strategic advantage is the Zoho One suite, which bundles 45+ Zoho apps into a single subscription ($37-$45 per user per month on typical plans). For businesses running multiple Zoho apps, this can be dramatically cheaper than buying best-of-breed separately.

For businesses committed to the Zoho ecosystem, Zoho Books is the obvious choice. The integration between modules is tighter than any third-party integration between best-of-breed apps, and the unified billing simplifies vendor management.

For businesses not already in Zoho, the ecosystem can feel like both an advantage and a trap. Once deeply integrated, switching away is expensive in migration effort. Evaluate whether Zoho's individual apps meet your needs in their own right — don't adopt Zoho Books just for the CRM or vice versa if the individual products don't match your requirements.

Pricing & Plans

FeatureFreeStandard ($15)Professional ($40)Premium ($60)
Users included13510
Invoicing & bankingYesYesYesYes
Recurring invoicesYesYesYesYes
Project trackingNoYesYesYes
Workflow rulesNo51010
Multi-currencyNoNoYesYes
InventoryNoNoYesYes
Purchase approvalNoNoYesYes
Custom functionsNoNoNoYes
BudgetingNoNoNoYes

The free plan for businesses under $50K/year revenue is genuinely usable — it includes core invoicing, banking, and basic reporting for a single user. Ideal for very small freelancers and side businesses. The revenue cap means you'll need to move to a paid tier as the business grows, but it's a no-cost start.

Standard at $15/month is one of the best-value accounting tiers in the market. Three users, project tracking, recurring invoicing, workflow rules, and all the core banking features at less than half the price of QuickBooks Simple Start.

Professional at $40/month adds multi-currency, inventory, purchase orders, and approval workflows. For growing small businesses with international operations or product sales, this is the right tier and still cheaper than QuickBooks Essentials + inventory add-ons.

Premium at $60/month adds custom functions, budgeting, vendor portal, and advanced analytics. Most small businesses won't need this tier unless they're building custom business logic.

Elite and Ultimate plans ($120 and $240/month) add multi-branch management, warehouse management, and advanced inventory features — targeted at larger small businesses with complex operations.

Compared to QuickBooks and Xero, Zoho Books is typically 40-60% cheaper at equivalent feature levels. For cost-sensitive businesses that don't need QuickBooks' US accountant network, the savings over a few years are substantial.

Zoho Books — Value Cloud Accounting

Full-featured accounting with invoicing, banking, inventory, project tracking, and workflow automation — dramatically cheaper than QuickBooks and Xero. Free tier available.

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