Accounting

Zoho Inventory vs QuickBooks

An honest breakdown of both tools — features, pricing, and who each one is actually built for.

Zoho Inventory
Zoho Inventory
CHALLENGER

Multi-channel inventory for online sellers.

★★★½☆3.8 / 5 (5 ratings)
Pricing
Free plan, paid from $39/mo
QuickBooks
QuickBooks
INCUMBENT

America's most-used small business accounting — at a growing premium.

Pricing
From $35/mo (Simple Start); $235/mo (Advanced)
Why teams leave QuickBooks

Prices have risen 60–80% over five years while the UX has barely changed. It's built for local small businesses, not for startups tracking burn rate and runway.

Feature Comparison

Zoho Inventory
QuickBooks
Income & expense tracking with bank feeds
Invoicing, estimates, and online payments
Payroll add-on for W-2 employees
Tax preparation and Schedule C export
Inventory and purchase orders (Plus+)
150+ standard financial reports

Pros & Cons

Zoho Inventory strengths

Zoho Inventory tracks stock in real time across multiple warehouses and selling channels — Amazon, eBay, Etsy, Shopify, and more — with serial and batch tracking, automated reorder points, and smart alerts. Deep integration with Zoho Books means accounting and inventory are always in sync without a third-party connector.

Target user

Multi-channel e-commerce sellers and product businesses managing several warehouses

QuickBooks strengths
Ubiquitous — virtually every accountant knows it
Massive ecosystem of 750+ integrations
Strong tax preparation and filing tools
Good invoicing for service businesses and retailers
QuickBooks weaknesses
Prices rose 60–80% over five years
Built for traditional small businesses, not modern startups
Poor for tracking burn rate, runway, or equity cap tables
Per-user fees scale costs as teams grow

Who Should Use Each?

Choose Zoho Inventory if…

Multi-channel e-commerce sellers and product businesses managing several warehouses

Choose QuickBooks if…

Traditional small businesses with a local accountant already familiar with it

The Verdict

Zoho Inventory is built for multi-channel e-commerce sellers and product businesses managing several warehouses. QuickBooks remains the go-to for traditional small businesses with a local accountant already familiar with it. If you're evaluating both, the question is whether you need QuickBooks's depth and ecosystem — or whether you'd rather pay less, move faster, and use a tool your team will actually enjoy.

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