3-WAY COMPARISON UPDATED JULY 12, 2026·19 MIN READ

Three accounting platforms. One settlement reconciliation problem.

A2X owns the established settlement-reconciliation category with ~25K brands and deep Xero/QBO/NetSuite/Sage Intacct integrations. Link My Books owns the modern UK-rooted alternative with aggressive pricing and growing US share. QuickBooks Commerce owns QBO-native ecom accounting for brands committed to the Intuit ecosystem. Full reconciliation flow comparison, COGS handling, sales tax treatment, multi-channel coverage, pricing economics, and the platform decision framework by revenue tier and channel complexity.

// 2026 VERDICT · 3 ECOM ACCOUNTING PLATFORMS UPDATED JULY 2026
MODERN ALTERNATIVE PLATFORM 02 UK-Rooted · Aggressive Pricing
Best For $200K-$10M cost-conscious
Brands~5K+
Channels4 major
Ledger AppsXero/QBO
Pricing$17-$99+/mo
QBO NATIVE PLATFORM 03 Intuit-Bundled · QBO Integration
Best For $100K-$5M QBO-committed
BundlingQBO Plus/Adv
Channels3 major
Ledger AppsQBO only
Pricing$90-$200+/mo
$500KREVENUE THRESHOLD
8-12HRMONTHLY CLOSE TIME SAVED
99%+RECONCILIATION ACCURACY
21-DAYIMPLEMENTATION TIMELINE
AI
Ecom Accounting Engine
COMPARISON QUERY
QUERY: best ecom accounting software 2026
Quick Answer

Three platforms dominate ecom-specific accounting. A2X (~25K brands) leads as the established category specialist with deepest channel coverage and integration with Xero, QuickBooks Online, NetSuite, and Sage Intacct. Link My Books (~5K brands, UK-rooted with rapid US growth) leads as the modern alternative with aggressive pricing (30-50% cheaper than A2X at equivalent volume). QuickBooks Commerce (bundled with QBO Plus/Advanced) leads for brands committed to the QuickBooks Online ecosystem wanting integrated accounting without separate settlement software. The core problem: Amazon, Shopify, eBay pay in periodic settlements (a $87K settlement covers 1,247 orders minus fees minus returns minus ads), and raw transaction data destroys P&L visibility unless aggregated into proper journal entries. Settlement reconciliation transforms platform chaos into ledger-ready accounting. Decision framework: revenue tier + channels sold on + accounting platform commitment + bookkeeper workflow preferences typically yields a clear winner. Launch threshold: $500K revenue minimum (below that, direct QBO connection works adequately). Implementation timeline: 21 days from decision to operational state.

// Answers At A Glance 6 Key Questions
Industry standard?

A2X. ~25K brands, deepest channel coverage, established integrations with all major accounting platforms.

Cost-effective alternative?

Link My Books. 30-50% cheaper than A2X at equivalent volume, modern UX, growing US presence.

QuickBooks-committed brand?

QuickBooks Commerce. Bundled with QBO Plus/Advanced. Less depth but tighter native integration.

Why does this matter?

Raw Amazon data destroys P&L visibility. Settlement reconciliation turns chaos into ledger-ready entries.

Revenue threshold?

$500K minimum. Below that, direct QBO connection adequate. Above that, manual reconciliation impractical.

Multi-channel brand?

A2X. Best channel breadth (Amazon all marketplaces, Shopify, eBay, Walmart, BigCommerce, Etsy).

A $4M Amazon brand ran direct QuickBooks Online integration for two years. Every Amazon transaction flowed in as a separate QBO entry: 1,200+ entries per settlement, all categorized as generic "Income" with no fee breakdown. Their P&L showed $87,000 in monthly revenue and $87,000 in expenses (because Amazon's net deposit was the only meaningful number). Their bookkeeper spent 18 hours per month trying to reverse-engineer the data. Their net margin was unknowable. Switch to A2X with proper chart of accounts mapping, and 30 days later their P&L showed gross sales of $124K, returns of $8K, marketplace fees of $19K, FBA fees of $14K, advertising of $11K, sales tax passthrough of $9K, and net settlement of $87K matching the bank deposit. Same money, same business, completely different visibility. The accounting wasn't broken — the reconciliation layer was missing.

Ecommerce accounting has a fundamental structural problem: marketplace platforms pay sellers in periodic settlements rather than per-transaction. The single bank deposit obscures gross revenue, fees, returns, ads, and sales tax behind a net number. Brands without proper reconciliation operate blind to channel profitability, true margin, and operational efficiency. The category solves this with settlement reconciliation: aggregating platform data into summary journal entries that flow into your accounting system as proper accounting. Three platforms dominate the category in 2026: A2X as the established specialist with the deepest ecosystem integrations, Link My Books as the modern alternative with aggressive pricing, QuickBooks Commerce as the QBO-native bundled option. By the end of this guide you will know how the reconciliation flow works, what each platform is and who fits each best, the head-to-head feature matrix, use case → platform winner mapping, COGS and sales tax handling, pricing economics and the 21-day implementation playbook, and how we structure accounting workflows for ecom clients. We have set up and managed accounting workflows across all three platforms for 32+ ecom brands — this is the July 2026 comparison.

[ 01 ]The Accounting Problem

The ecom accounting problem

Ecommerce accounting is harder than traditional retail accounting for one structural reason: marketplaces pay sellers in periodic settlements rather than transaction-by-transaction. The settlement obscures everything that matters for proper P&L visibility.

What a typical Amazon settlement contains

An Amazon settlement deposits a single net amount into your bank account every 14 days (US sellers). Inside that one bank entry is: gross sales across hundreds or thousands of orders, returns and refunds, marketplace referral fees, FBA fulfillment fees, FBA storage fees, low-inventory fees, aged inventory surcharges, removal fees, advertising spend (Sponsored Products, Brands, Display, Video), sales tax collected (passthrough liability), promotional credits, lightning deal fees, refurbishment fees, and miscellaneous adjustments. A $87,400 deposit might represent $124,000 gross sales minus $36,600 in various fees and pass-throughs.

The direct integration problem

QuickBooks Online has a direct Amazon Seller Central connector. So does Xero. The integrations pull raw transaction data into your accounting system. The problem: raw data is overwhelming and miscategorized. Every Amazon transaction (sale, refund, fee adjustment, FBA fee, ad spend, tax collected) becomes a separate accounting entry, creating thousands of monthly transactions in your books and destroying P&L visibility. The accounting system shows accurate aggregate cash flow but useless detail-level reporting.

What settlement reconciliation does

Settlement reconciliation aggregates raw platform data into summary journal entries by category that map to your chart of accounts. Instead of 1,247 individual Amazon entries flowing to "Income," reconciliation generates 8-12 journal entries per settlement: Gross Sales, Returns & Refunds, Marketplace Fees, FBA Fees, Storage Fees, Advertising, Sales Tax Collected (Liability), Shipping Income, Other Adjustments, Net Deposit. The result: P&L that shows actual channel economics, gross margin by SKU, advertising as separable expense, and true net contribution.

The revenue threshold

The reconciliation problem scales with volume. Below $500K annual revenue, manual reconciliation or direct integration may be tolerable. Between $500K-$1M revenue, the reconciliation overhead becomes painful and ecom-specialized platforms pay back quickly. Above $1M revenue, settlement reconciliation is essentially mandatory — manual approaches break down operationally and create material accuracy risk.

The bookkeeper relationship matters

The accounting platform output flows into your QuickBooks Online, Xero, or NetSuite where bookkeepers and accountants work. Their familiarity with the chosen platform affects monthly close speed, accuracy, and ongoing reliability. A2X is the industry standard — most ecom-specialized bookkeepers know it. Link My Books familiarity is growing rapidly. QuickBooks Commerce skills are common among any QBO-trained bookkeeper. Choose platform with bookkeeper input.

[ 02 ]A2X

A2X: the category leader

A2X built the ecom accounting category. Founded 2014, A2X focused exclusively on settlement reconciliation for ecommerce sellers and became the industry standard for serious ecom accounting. The result: ~25,000+ brands and deep integrations with every major accounting platform.

What A2X does well

  • Deepest channel coverage — Amazon (US, UK, EU, AU, CA, JP, MX, IN, BR marketplaces), Shopify, eBay, Walmart, BigCommerce, Etsy. Multi-channel brands get unified reconciliation across all platforms
  • Enterprise accounting integration — established connections with Xero, QuickBooks Online, NetSuite, Sage Intacct. The only platform with mature NetSuite and Sage Intacct integrations for brands graduating to enterprise accounting
  • Industry-standard bookkeeper familiarity — most ecom-specialized bookkeepers and accountants know A2X workflows. Reduces operational friction and onboarding time
  • Settlement-level reconciliation depth — granular fee categorization, sales tax separation, advertising breakouts, returns tracking with full audit trail
  • Inventory-aware COGS — supports unit cost upload at SKU level for accurate per-sale COGS calculation. Updates as landed costs change
  • Multi-currency and multi-entity support — brands operating across countries or entities get proper currency handling and intercompany reconciliation

What A2X does poorly

  • Pricing higher than alternatives — $29-$299+/mo positioning premium relative to Link My Books at equivalent volume
  • UX feels less modern — the platform's history shows in interface design that lags newer Link My Books
  • Setup complexity — the depth that justifies A2X creates more configuration overhead than simpler alternatives. 3-5 day initial setup vs 1-2 days for Link My Books
  • Less aggressive feature development on UX — established platform pace; product velocity feels slower than newer competitor

Who fits A2X best

$500K-$50M ecom brands selling on 2+ channels (multi-channel coverage matters). Brands using or planning to use Xero, QuickBooks Online, NetSuite, or Sage Intacct. Brands with existing ecom-specialized bookkeepers familiar with A2X workflows. Brands valuing deep reconciliation accuracy over UX polish. Brands planning to graduate from QBO to NetSuite or Sage Intacct (the A2X-to-enterprise-ledger path).

The A2X-Bookkeeper Network Effect

A2X's position as industry standard creates a network effect for bookkeeper recruitment and switching. Most ecom-specialized accounting firms (Cataluna, EcomCFO, BoomCFO, Bean Ninjas) are deeply A2X-trained. Switching to a different platform forces switching bookkeepers, retraining bookkeepers, or accepting suboptimal workflow knowledge. For brands with established accounting relationships, A2X is often the path of least operational friction even when alternatives are objectively cheaper. The cost premium of A2X often pays back through reduced bookkeeper friction and faster monthly close.

[ 03 ]Link My Books

Link My Books: the modern alternative

Link My Books built the modern alternative to A2X. Founded 2015 in the UK, Link My Books focused on cleaner UX and aggressive pricing to challenge A2X's category dominance. The platform has gained meaningful US market share through 2024-2026 with strong word-of-mouth in cost-conscious ecom communities.

What Link My Books does well

  • Aggressive pricing — 30-50% cheaper than A2X at equivalent transaction volume. Pricing transparency makes cost comparison straightforward
  • Modern UX — cleaner merchant interface than A2X, better dashboard, more intuitive settlement review
  • Strong Xero integration — the platform's UK roots mean deep Xero integration matching A2X's quality
  • Solid QuickBooks Online integration — growing QBO integration depth, narrowing the gap with A2X
  • Faster setup — 1-2 day initial configuration vs A2X's 3-5 days. Lower complexity floor for smaller brands
  • UK/EU market depth — for brands selling in UK or EU marketplaces, Link My Books's regional focus often delivers tighter reconciliation than A2X

What Link My Books does poorly

  • Less channel coverage — covers Amazon, Shopify, eBay, Etsy but with less depth on Walmart, BigCommerce, and international Amazon marketplaces (Japan, India, Brazil)
  • No enterprise accounting integration — primarily Xero and QBO. Brands planning NetSuite or Sage Intacct must switch platforms when graduating
  • Less bookkeeper network familiarity — growing fast but most ecom-specialized bookkeepers still default to A2X. Workflow retraining cost when adopting
  • Less mature for enterprise complexity — multi-entity, multi-currency, and complex tax scenarios handled less robustly than A2X
  • Smaller installed base means smaller community — less abundant documentation, fewer accountants familiar, less troubleshooting community

Who fits Link My Books best

$200K-$10M brands valuing modern UX and cost-effective pricing. Brands on Xero accounting platform where Link My Books's integration matches A2X. Cost-conscious brands where the 30-50% pricing advantage materially affects unit economics. UK or EU-based brands where Link My Books's regional focus delivers benefits. Brands with flexibility on bookkeeper choice (less constrained by A2X-trained bookkeeper relationships).

[ 04 ]QuickBooks Commerce

QuickBooks Commerce: the QBO native

QuickBooks Commerce is Intuit's native ecommerce accounting solution built into QuickBooks Online. Replaced TradeGecko after Intuit's 2020 acquisition. The platform serves brands committed to the QuickBooks Online ecosystem wanting integrated ecom accounting without a separate settlement tool.

What QuickBooks Commerce does well

  • Bundled with QBO Plus and Advanced — no separate subscription. QBO Plus ($90/mo) and Advanced ($200/mo) include Commerce features at no incremental cost
  • Native QBO integration — tightest possible integration since Commerce is built into QBO. No data sync friction, no third-party API dependencies
  • Inventory module included — basic inventory tracking integrated with COGS calculation. Useful for brands managing inventory directly in QBO
  • Sales channel connections — Amazon, Shopify, eBay direct connections via QBO Commerce. Functional for standard scenarios
  • QBO ecosystem benefits — works with all QBO add-ons (payroll, payment processing, banking, tax) in unified Intuit ecosystem

What QuickBooks Commerce does poorly

  • Less reconciliation depth than A2X/LMB — QBO Commerce was not built ground-up for ecom settlement reconciliation. Pulls platform data but with less granular fee categorization than dedicated tools
  • Multi-channel handling weaker — brands selling on 3+ channels often hit limitations that dedicated platforms handle natively
  • Limited international Amazon marketplace support — Amazon US works; UK, EU, AU, JP marketplaces have varying support
  • No NetSuite/Sage Intacct path — QBO Commerce only works within QBO. Brands graduating to enterprise accounting must switch platforms entirely
  • TradeGecko legacy complications — the platform's history as the renamed TradeGecko creates inconsistent feature behavior in some areas
  • Less bookkeeper specialization — while QBO-trained bookkeepers can use Commerce, ecom-specialized bookkeepers often default to A2X workflows

Who fits QuickBooks Commerce best

$100K-$5M QuickBooks-committed brands selling primarily on Amazon US and Shopify. Brands wanting integrated accounting without managing a separate settlement reconciliation subscription. Smaller operations with single-channel or two-channel complexity. Brands without immediate plans to graduate from QBO to enterprise accounting. QBO-trained bookkeepers comfortable with the platform.

[ 05 ]Reconciliation Flow

The settlement reconciliation flow

The platforms solve the same problem with similar mechanics. The flow below shows the transformation from raw Amazon settlement data through the reconciliation engine into ledger-ready journal entries.

// SETTLEMENT RECONCILIATION FLOW EXAMPLE: $87,400 AMAZON SETTLEMENT
STAGE 01 Raw Settlement Data
Amazon Seller Central: 1,247 orders + thousands of fee adjustments + ad spend + tax collected over 14 days
Orders1,247
Fee Lines3,400+
Ad Charges200+
Bank Deposit$87,400
STAGE 02 Platform Engine
A2X / LMB / QB Commerce: categorize every line into proper accounting buckets, separate tax passthrough, allocate fees
Categorization12 buckets
Tax SeparationLiability
COGS LookupSKU level
Engine Output8-12 entries
STAGE 03 Ledger Journal Entries
Xero / QBO / NetSuite: proper P&L visibility — gross sales, fees, ads, taxes, net deposit
Gross Sales$124,000
Marketplace Fees($19,000)
FBA + Ads + Other($26,600)
Net Deposit$87,400
The result: proper P&L visibility on $124K actual gross sales, $19K marketplace fees as separate expense category, FBA fees, advertising spend, and sales tax as passthrough liability — not a single useless $87K "Income" line.

The reconciliation transforms three blind spots

Gross-to-net visibility: without reconciliation, your books show net deposits as revenue. With reconciliation, gross sales are visible, enabling true revenue tracking and channel comparison. Fee category separation: marketplace fees, FBA fees, storage fees, advertising spend are each separate expense lines vs blended into "fees." Sales tax treatment: marketplace facilitator tax (Amazon collects on your behalf) appears as liability passthrough vs incorrectly mixed into revenue.

The COGS dimension

COGS tracking is layered onto the reconciliation flow. The platform looks up unit costs by SKU as orders are reconciled, generating COGS journal entries proportional to units sold. The accuracy depends on unit cost data quality: brands maintaining accurate landed cost per SKU (factory cost + freight + tariffs + FBA prep) get accurate gross margin. Brands using approximate costs get approximate margins. A2X and Link My Books support SKU-level unit cost upload; QuickBooks Commerce uses QBO inventory module with similar mechanics.

The sales tax dimension

Sales tax handling varies by platform and seller scenario. Marketplace facilitator states (most US states since 2018-2021): Amazon collects sales tax and remits to the state on your behalf. The reconciliation should treat this as a liability passthrough — not your revenue, not your expense. All three platforms handle this correctly with proper configuration. Non-marketplace-facilitator scenarios: Shopify direct sales, B2B wholesale, or states without marketplace facilitator coverage require seller-collected sales tax tracked separately. Often supplemented with TaxJar, Avalara, Numeral, or Anrok for proper multi-state filing.

[ 06 ]Feature Matrix

Head-to-head feature matrix

The matrix below compares the three platforms across 10 key dimensions. The "WIN" marker shows where each leads. Note the patterns: A2X wins category depth and integrations, Link My Books wins pricing and UX, QuickBooks Commerce wins QBO-native bundling.

// 3-PLATFORM FEATURE MATRIX 10 DIMENSIONS · JULY 2026
FeatureA2XLink My BooksQuickBooks Commerce
Sweet Spot Revenue$500K-$50M$200K-$10M$100K-$5M
Channels Supported6+ major4 major3 major
Amazon Marketplace Depth9 marketplaces3 marketplacesUS primary
Xero IntegrationBestBestN/A
QBO IntegrationStrongStrongNative
NetSuite / Sage IntacctEstablishedNoneNone
COGS TrackingSKU-levelSKU-levelInventory module
Multi-Currency / EntityMatureGrowingBasic
Setup Speed3-5 days1-2 days1-2 days
Pricing at Mid Volume$99-$199/mo$33-$59/moBundled QBO

Reading the matrix patterns

Three patterns matter strategically. A2X wins category depth — broadest channel coverage, deepest marketplace support, only platform with enterprise accounting integrations. Link My Books wins pricing and UX — 30-50% cheaper at equivalent volume, modern interface, faster setup. QuickBooks Commerce wins QBO-native integration — if you're committed to QBO Plus or Advanced, Commerce features are bundled with no incremental cost.

The pricing reality check

For a brand processing 1,000 orders/month: A2X Small tier ~$59/mo, Link My Books Pro tier ~$33/mo, QuickBooks Commerce embedded in QBO Plus $90/mo. Note that QBO Plus is more expensive overall but includes core accounting; the Commerce-specific cost is effectively zero on top. The cost comparison is platform-only ($26/mo difference between A2X and LMB) vs total accounting stack including bookkeeper time, accounting system, and tools.

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21-Day Accounting Platform Setup

Baseline audit, platform selection via 4-factor framework, historical reconciliation validation, bookkeeper handoff, go-live with monthly close cadence.

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[ 07 ]Use Case Winners

Use case → platform winner mapping

Different ecom scenarios favor different platforms. The grid below maps common accounting scenarios to the platform that wins each.

// USE CASE → WINNER MAP 8 USE CASES · 3 PLATFORMS
Multi-channel brand (Amazon + Shopify + Walmart) $3M-$20M brand needing unified reconciliation across multiple marketplaces
A2A2X
Cost-conscious mid-market on Xero $500K-$5M brand wanting modern UX at lower pricing
LMLink My Books
QuickBooks Online committed brand $200K-$3M brand using QBO Plus or Advanced for primary accounting
QBQuickBooks Commerce
International Amazon (US + UK + EU + JP) Brand selling across multiple international Amazon marketplaces
A2A2X
Graduating to NetSuite or Sage Intacct $10M+ brand transitioning from QBO to enterprise accounting
A2A2X
UK-based brand selling EU and UK Amazon UK or EU brand prioritizing regional Amazon coverage
LMLink My Books
Established A2X-trained bookkeeper Brand with existing accounting relationship deeply A2X-trained
A2A2X
Single-channel Amazon US brand starting out $100K-$500K Amazon US-only brand wanting basic ecom accounting
QBQuickBooks Commerce

The decision pattern by revenue tier

  • Under $500K revenue: QuickBooks Commerce bundled with QBO, or simple Link My Books Lite tier. A2X often premium for the volume
  • $500K-$2M revenue: Link My Books Pro for cost optimization, or A2X if multi-channel; QuickBooks Commerce if QBO-committed and single-channel
  • $2M-$10M revenue: A2X for multi-channel and enterprise readiness; Link My Books for Xero brands prioritizing cost
  • $10M+ revenue: A2X for established integrations, NetSuite/Sage Intacct path, and bookkeeper familiarity. Link My Books increasingly viable at lower end of this tier but A2X remains default
[ 08 ]COGS, Tax & Special Cases

COGS, sales tax, and special cases

The major accounting platforms handle settlement reconciliation similarly. The differentiation often comes in how they handle COGS tracking, sales tax across different jurisdictions, and special operational scenarios.

COGS tracking methodology

Three COGS approaches dominate. SKU-level unit cost (A2X and LMB): upload unit cost per SKU; platform calculates COGS automatically per order based on units sold. Accurate but requires maintaining unit cost data as landed costs change (tariffs, freight, supplier price changes). Average cost periodic adjustment: simpler but less accurate; works for low-complexity catalogs. QuickBooks inventory module: integrated COGS via QBO's inventory items; functional but less ecom-optimized than dedicated unit cost upload.

Landed cost components in COGS

  • Factory/supplier cost — the base unit cost from your manufacturer
  • Freight in — shipping from factory to your warehouse or FBA, allocated per unit
  • Tariffs and duties — Section 301 China tariffs (25% on most goods), HTSUS classifications, customs broker fees. Tariffs at 2026 rates are material COGS components
  • FBA prep fees — if using prep services for FBA inbound preparation
  • Inspection and QC — third-party inspection fees if applicable

Sales tax handling scenarios

Sales tax handling depends on channel and seller scenario. Marketplace facilitator (Amazon US, Shopify Tax in some states): marketplace collects and remits on your behalf. Reconciliation treats as liability passthrough — not your revenue. Seller-collected (Shopify direct in non-facilitator states, B2B wholesale): you collect, you remit. Track as separate liability account. Often integrated with TaxJar, Avalara, Numeral, or Anrok for multi-state filing automation. International (UK VAT, EU IOSS, Canada GST/HST): complex multi-jurisdiction handling. A2X handles international scenarios most maturely.

Returns and refunds handling

Returns appear in settlements as negative line items. Platforms aggregate returns into a separate journal entry line (Returns & Refunds) that reduces gross sales. The treatment matters for accurate gross margin: gross sales minus returns equals net sales, against which COGS is calculated. Brands with high return rates (apparel typically 15-30%, beauty 5-10%) get materially different P&L visibility with proper returns reconciliation vs blended net sales reporting.

Advertising expense categorization

Amazon advertising (Sponsored Products, Brands, Display, Video) flows through settlements as separate fee lines. Proper reconciliation puts ad spend in a separate expense category, enabling clean ACoS/TACoS calculation. Without separation, ad spend blends into "marketplace fees" and obscures advertising performance. Channel-level ad tracking matters increasingly as brands optimize across Amazon, Google Shopping, Meta paid social.

Inventory transfer scenarios

Inventory transfers between warehouses (FBA inbound, 3PL transfers, removal orders back to seller) create accounting complexity. Removal orders pulling inventory from FBA back to seller warehouse require inventory account adjustments, freight cost allocation, and proper handling to avoid double-counting. A2X and Link My Books handle removal order accounting; QuickBooks Commerce requires manual inventory adjustment workflows.

The Year-End Tax Implications

Tax accountants need ecom-specific data for proper tax filing. Marketplace facilitator sales tax (collected by Amazon on your behalf) appears on Amazon 1099-K forms but is not your revenue. Returns and refunds, advertising spend categorization, COGS accuracy — all affect tax filing accuracy. Brands without proper reconciliation often discover at year-end that their tax filings have material accuracy issues, requiring amended returns and creating audit risk. The settlement reconciliation platforms support year-end tax workflows but only if monthly reconciliation has been done correctly throughout the year. Tax accountants familiar with ecom (separate specialization from general business tax) often request specific A2X reports or equivalent from other platforms.

[ 09 ]Pricing & Migration

Pricing economics & migration playbook

Platform pricing scales by transaction volume and channel count. The migration timeline is shorter than other ecom platform categories at ~21 days, but bookkeeper coordination is critical.

2026 pricing summary

  • A2X: Mini $29/mo (200 orders), Small $59/mo (1,000 orders), Standard $99-$199/mo (5,000-10,000 orders), Enterprise $299+/mo (high volume or multi-channel)
  • Link My Books: Lite $17/mo (200 orders), Pro $33/mo (1,000 orders), Premium $59/mo (5,000 orders), Enterprise $99+/mo (high volume)
  • QuickBooks Commerce: bundled with QuickBooks Online Plus ($90/mo) or Advanced ($200/mo). No separate Commerce subscription

The 21-day implementation playbook

  1. Days 1-5: Accounting baseline and channel inventory. Document current setup (accounting platform, bookkeeper, channels, sales tax complexity, COGS method, transaction volume). Identify pain points (reconciliation errors, missing fees, lack of channel P&L).
  2. Days 6-10: Platform decision framework application. Apply 4-factor framework (revenue tier, channels, accounting platform commitment, bookkeeper workflow preferences). Validate decision with bookkeeper.
  3. Days 11-15: Trial setup and historical reconciliation. Set up trial account, connect channels, process last 1-2 settlement periods to verify reconciliation quality against manual records. Validate COGS handling, sales tax treatment.
  4. Days 16-19: Configuration and go-live. Configure chart of accounts mapping, set up automation cadence (biweekly or monthly), establish bookkeeper review workflow. Process current period as first live cycle.
  5. Days 20-21: Ongoing operations setup. Establish monthly close cadence, document SOPs, plan quarterly reviews. Set up year-end coordination with tax accountant.

The platform switching scenario

Brands occasionally switch platforms (typically A2X to LMB for cost, or QBO Commerce to A2X for depth). Switching is moderately complex: setting up new platform with same chart of accounts mapping, processing the cut-over settlement period carefully, validating reconciliation against previous platform for 30-60 day overlap, training bookkeeper on new platform. Most switches happen at year-end or quarter-end for clean cut-overs.

The bookkeeper coordination critical phase

Bookkeeper involvement throughout implementation is critical. Bookkeepers validate that journal entries match their expected chart of accounts, troubleshoot edge cases, and integrate platform output into monthly close procedures. Implementation without bookkeeper involvement creates workflow friction that surfaces at month-end and requires backtracking. The bookkeeper-platform fit often determines long-term satisfaction more than the platform's marginal feature differences.

[ 10 ]How EMA Helps

How Evolve Media structures accounting workflows

Accounting platform selection, implementation, and ongoing operations are part of EMA's broader operations work for ecom brands. Most brands underperform their accounting setup because of platform-bookkeeper mismatch or workflow gaps rather than platform deficiency.

The 21-day accounting platform setup

Accounting baseline audit and channel inventory documentation. Platform selection via 4-factor decision framework with bookkeeper input. Historical reconciliation validation comparing platform output to existing records. Configuration of chart of accounts mapping between platform and QBO/Xero/NetSuite. Bookkeeper workflow integration and SOP documentation. Go-live with first monthly close cycle and ongoing operations setup.

Ongoing accounting operations support

For brands maintaining accounting workflows, EMA coordinates monthly reconciliation validation, quarterly platform reviews to validate continued fit as brand scales, year-end tax accountant coordination, channel expansion accounting setup as brands add marketplaces, and platform migration management when revenue scale or accounting platform graduation warrants switching.

Integration with broader strategy

Accounting workflow integrates with FBA fee tracking (proper fee categorization in journal entries), tariffs and landed cost (the COGS calculation accuracy depends on proper landed cost tracking), working capital financing (lenders require accurate financials), and COGS tracking (the inventory-to-accounting integration).

Key Takeaways

The 7 Things to Remember About Ecom Accounting Platforms in 2026

  • Three platforms dominate ecom-specific accounting: A2X (~25K brands, category leader with deepest integrations), Link My Books (~5K brands, modern alternative with aggressive pricing), QuickBooks Commerce (bundled with QBO Plus/Advanced, QBO-native option)
  • The core problem: marketplace platforms pay in periodic settlements (a single $87K bank deposit covering 1,247 orders + fees + ads + tax). Without settlement reconciliation, raw data destroys P&L visibility and gross margin tracking
  • Revenue threshold: $500K minimum for settlement reconciliation platforms to pay back. Below that, direct QBO connection adequate. Above $1M, reconciliation essentially mandatory for proper accounting
  • Platform decision factors: revenue tier (under $5M favors any, $5M+ favors A2X) + channels sold on (multi-channel favors A2X) + accounting platform commitment (QBO-native favors QB Commerce, Xero favors A2X/LMB) + bookkeeper workflow preferences
  • 2026 pricing: A2X $29-$299+/mo (premium positioning), Link My Books $17-$99+/mo (30-50% cheaper at equivalent volume), QuickBooks Commerce bundled with QBO Plus ($90/mo) or Advanced ($200/mo)
  • A2X wins enterprise accounting path. Only platform with established NetSuite and Sage Intacct integrations. Critical for brands graduating from QBO to enterprise accounting (typical $10M-$25M transition)
  • Bookkeeper familiarity matters. A2X is industry standard for ecom-specialized bookkeepers. Link My Books familiarity growing rapidly. QBO Commerce works for any QBO-trained bookkeeper. Choose platform with bookkeeper input, not just feature comparison

Common Questions

Ecom Accounting Platform FAQ

Which ecom accounting platform should I choose?

The decision depends on four factors. Revenue tier — under $500K often fits QuickBooks Commerce or basic Link My Books; $500K-$10M splits across all three based on other factors; $10M-$50M favors A2X with established Xero/QBO/NetSuite integration; $50M+ favors A2X enterprise or custom integration. Channel complexity — brands selling on 2+ channels (Amazon + Shopify, Amazon + Walmart + eBay) benefit from A2X's channel depth. Accounting platform commitment — brands committed to QuickBooks Online find QuickBooks Commerce structurally aligned; Xero brands find A2X or Link My Books better. Bookkeeper workflow — established bookkeepers often prefer A2X (industry standard) over alternatives requiring workflow retraining.

What is settlement reconciliation and why does it matter?

Amazon, Shopify, and other ecom platforms pay sellers in periodic settlements rather than transaction-by-transaction. An Amazon settlement might be $87,400 covering 1,247 orders minus $14,200 in fees minus $1,800 in returns minus $9,600 in advertising spend over a 14-day period. Settlement reconciliation transforms that single bank deposit into properly categorized journal entries: gross sales by SKU, returns, marketplace fees, FBA fees, advertising costs, shipping income, sales tax collected. Without reconciliation, the entire settlement flows to one bank account line, destroying P&L visibility. Settlement reconciliation is the core problem ecom accounting platforms solve — manual reconciliation at scale is impractical above 100 orders/month.

How big are these platforms?

A2X serves approximately 25,000+ ecom businesses globally, making it by far the dominant settlement-reconciliation specialist for ecommerce. The platform has deep partnerships with major accounting platforms (Xero, QuickBooks Online, NetSuite, Sage Intacct) and processes billions in marketplace settlements annually. Link My Books serves approximately 5,000+ brands with strong UK/EU presence and growing US market share — the platform has gained meaningful ground in 2024-2026 through modern UX and aggressive pricing. QuickBooks Commerce is embedded in QuickBooks Online's broader user base (~7M+ subscribers globally) but only a subset of those users actively use the Commerce features for ecommerce-specific accounting.

What is the difference between A2X and direct QuickBooks integration?

QuickBooks Online has direct connectors to Amazon Seller Central, Shopify, and other channels that pull raw transaction data into QBO. The problem: raw transaction data is overwhelming and miscategorized. Every Amazon transaction (sale, refund, fee adjustment, FBA fee, ad spend, tax collected) becomes a separate QBO entry, creating thousands of monthly transactions and destroying P&L visibility. A2X solves this by aggregating settlement data into summary journal entries by category (gross sales, returns, FBA fees, advertising) that map to your chart of accounts. A2X is essentially a translation layer that turns ecom platform chaos into ledger-ready accounting entries. Direct QBO connection without A2X works for very low transaction volumes but breaks down above $200K-$500K annual revenue.

How much do these platforms cost?

Pricing scales by transaction volume and channel count. A2X 2026 pricing: Mini $29/month (up to 200 monthly orders), Small $59/month (up to 1,000 orders), Standard $99-$199/month (most ecom brands), Enterprise $299+/month (high volume or multi-channel complexity). Link My Books pricing: Lite $17/month (200 orders), Pro $33/month (1,000 orders), Premium $59/month (5,000 orders), Enterprise $99+/month — generally 30-50% cheaper than A2X at equivalent volume. QuickBooks Commerce is bundled with QuickBooks Online Plus ($90/month) or Advanced ($200/month) — not sold separately. Annual contracts typically discount 10-15% across the dedicated platforms.

Does my accountant or bookkeeper need to know about these platforms?

Critical. The platform output flows into your QuickBooks Online, Xero, or NetSuite where your bookkeeper or accountant works. They need familiarity with the platform to validate the journal entries, troubleshoot reconciliation issues, and integrate the workflow into monthly close procedures. A2X is the industry standard — most ecom-specialized bookkeepers and accountants already know A2X workflows. Link My Books familiarity is growing rapidly but less universal. QuickBooks Commerce skills are common among any QBO-trained bookkeeper. Validating bookkeeper familiarity before platform selection prevents workflow friction. If your current bookkeeper doesn't work with ecom platforms, finding an ecom-specialized bookkeeper is often a higher-leverage move than the platform choice itself.

What channels do these platforms support?

All three support the major ecom platforms but with varying depth. A2X supports Amazon (US, UK, EU, AU, CA, JP, MX, IN, BR marketplaces), Shopify, eBay, Walmart, BigCommerce, Etsy. Link My Books supports Amazon, Shopify, eBay, Etsy with growing channel additions. QuickBooks Commerce supports Amazon, Shopify, eBay via QBO direct connections but with less ecom-specific reconciliation depth. For brands selling on Walmart, BigCommerce, or international Amazon marketplaces, A2X's channel breadth matters. For brands on standard Amazon + Shopify, all three handle the use case but with different reconciliation quality.

How does sales tax handling work?

Sales tax handling separates the platforms meaningfully. Amazon marketplace facilitator laws (since 2018-2021 implementations) mean Amazon collects and remits sales tax in most US states on behalf of sellers — the seller's books should reflect this as tax-collected-by-Amazon (a liability passthrough) rather than seller's revenue. A2X handles this correctly out-of-the-box with proper tax separation in journal entries. Link My Books handles the Amazon marketplace facilitator scenarios well. QuickBooks Commerce handles the basics but may require manual configuration for complex multi-state scenarios. For brands with significant non-marketplace-facilitator sales (Shopify direct, B2B wholesale) needing sales tax tracking, separate sales tax software (TaxJar, Avalara, Numeral, Anrok) integrates with all three accounting platforms.

How is COGS tracked?

COGS (Cost of Goods Sold) tracking has multiple approaches. A2X supports unit cost upload at the SKU level, automatically calculating COGS per sale based on unit cost and units sold. Update unit costs as landed costs change (tariffs, freight, supplier pricing). Link My Books supports similar COGS tracking with slightly less mature UX. QuickBooks Commerce uses QBO's inventory module for COGS, requiring inventory items to be set up in QBO with proper costing. For brands wanting precise per-unit-cost COGS reflecting landed costs (including tariffs, freight, FBA prep), A2X's approach typically delivers the most accurate per-SKU profitability picture. Approximate-cost methods (average cost, periodic adjustment) work for low-complexity catalogs but lose precision at scale.

What about NetSuite or Sage Intacct integration?

A2X leads on enterprise accounting platform support. A2X has established integrations with NetSuite, Sage Intacct, and other enterprise ledgers — the structural fit for $10M+ ecom brands using enterprise accounting. Link My Books primarily targets Xero and QuickBooks Online with less enterprise-platform integration. QuickBooks Commerce is exclusively QuickBooks Online. For brands graduating from QuickBooks Online to NetSuite (typical $10M-$25M transition), A2X's existing NetSuite integration makes the transition smoother than switching accounting platforms. For Sage Intacct brands, A2X is the standard recommendation.

Can I switch platforms later?

Yes, but switching is moderately complex. The platforms generate journal entries that flow into your accounting system; historical entries from the previous platform remain in your accounting system as historical data. Switching requires: setting up new platform with same chart of accounts mapping, processing the cut-over settlement period carefully (avoid duplicate entries), validating reconciliation against the previous platform for a 30-60 day overlap period, training bookkeeper on new platform workflow. Most switches happen at year-end or quarter-end for clean cut-overs. Plan 2-3 months for switching with bookkeeper involvement throughout.

Do I need an ecom-specialized accountant?

Above $1M revenue, almost certainly yes. Ecom accounting has unique complexity: settlement reconciliation, inventory accounting under multi-channel scenarios, sales tax across marketplace facilitator vs direct channels, COGS tracking with landed cost components (tariffs, freight, FBA prep), advertising spend categorization, returns handling. General small-business accountants often struggle with ecom-specific scenarios. Ecom-specialized firms (Cataluna, EcomCFO, BoomCFO, Bean Ninjas, others) understand these scenarios natively. The cost premium for ecom specialization typically pays back through fewer errors, faster month-end close, more accurate profitability reporting, and proactive financial guidance specific to ecom growth dynamics.

// Evolve Media Services

The Full Ecom Accounting Stack

A2X Implementation

A2X setup with chart of accounts mapping to Xero, QBO, NetSuite, or Sage Intacct. Channel connection, SKU-level COGS configuration, multi-currency setup.

Link My Books Migration

Migration from A2X or direct QBO to Link My Books for cost optimization. Validation period overlap, bookkeeper retraining coordination, ongoing optimization.

QuickBooks Commerce Setup

QuickBooks Commerce configuration for QBO-committed brands. Channel connection, inventory module setup, sales tax configuration for marketplace facilitator scenarios.

Enterprise Accounting Graduation

QBO to NetSuite or Sage Intacct graduation including A2X integration migration. Coordinates with enterprise accounting firms for clean transition without reconciliation gaps.

Ongoing Accounting Operations

Monthly reconciliation validation, quarterly platform reviews, year-end tax accountant coordination, channel expansion accounting setup as brands scale.

Ian Smith
Ian Smith
Founder, Evolve Media Agency · Ecom Operations & Accounting Strategy

Ian co-founded Evolve Media Agency in 2017 with his partner Megan. Over 9 years he has set up and managed accounting workflows for ecom brands — including platform implementations across A2X, Link My Books, and QuickBooks Commerce for 32+ clients. One $4M Amazon brand's switch from direct QBO connection to A2X with proper chart of accounts mapping transformed their P&L from an unreadable single-line $87K monthly net to clean visibility of $124K gross sales, $19K marketplace fees, $14K FBA fees, $11K advertising, and $9K sales tax passthrough — identifying $36K in monthly expense categories they had never properly tracked. Based in Colorado. Read Ian's full bio →

Work With Ian

3 Platforms. 21-Day Implementation. 99%+ Reconciliation Accuracy.

Make Your Books Tell The Truth.

Book a free 30-minute strategy call. We will audit your current accounting setup, apply the 4-factor decision framework (revenue tier, channels, accounting platform, bookkeeper workflow), validate the platform recommendation with your bookkeeper, and lay out the 21-day implementation playbook including historical reconciliation validation and go-live coordination.