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What is a hybrid work model? 7 tips to make it great

What is a hybrid work model? 7 tips to make it great

Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
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In today's ever-changing work landscape, hybrid work models are becoming increasingly popular. In this post, we'll dive into what hybrid work is, its benefits and challenges, and how to make it successful for your team.

What is hybrid remote work?

Hybrid remote work, also called hybrid working, is a flexible work model in which employees work both in person and remotely. This lets team members work in-office for some tasks and work from home for others, combining the best of both worlds.

What are the elements of a hybrid work model?

Every hybrid work model is unique, but to maximize efficiency both on and off-site, you'll need a few things in place:

  1. Remote communication: A work communication app like Slack helps your remote workforce stay in touch no matter where they are, ensuring that both remote employees and in-office team members are on the same page. Set up standing threads for weekly updates to improve oversight and create a sense of teamwork regardless of location.
  2. Project management system: Tools like Jira or Asana make it easier for hybrid work teams and fully remote teams to organize tasks, deadlines, and responsibilities—both in the office and working remotely.
  3. Flexible work schedules: Allowing employees to adjust their hybrid work schedule to accommodate their needs and preferred work environment can improve work-life balance and boost employee engagement.
  4. Designated office space: Remote workers should have a comfortable and dedicated workspace at home, while in-person employees need an organized and inviting space for office work.
  5. Training and support: Team leaders, as well as the IT department, must provide the necessary training and support for remote employees and in-office staff to adapt to a hybrid work environment effectively.
  6. Company culture: Maintaining a strong company culture across remote and in-office team members is essential for employee engagement and hybrid work success, whether hybrid workers are in the same location or scattered across multiple time zones.
  7. Automation: Leveraging automation tools can help streamline processes, improve communication, and reduce the workload for both remote and in-office employees.

A hybrid-remote model example for a finance team

Here's how the elements of a hybrid work model come together. Let's look at a finance team that's responsible for confirming and paying bills. Some of them are in the physical office full time by choice and some are working from home:

  1. An invoice arrives via an email address that’s monitored by the team’s finance automation software
  2. The software reads the invoice and enters it in the system
  3. A remote-work employee receives a notification of the arrival, reviews the invoice, and confirms that the information has been captured correctly
  4. The finance software then routes the invoice to the right people for approval—one approver is working remotely and one is at the office
  5. Both approvers receive system notifications and confirm the invoice—the in-person employee confirms it on her desktop computer, while the remote employee approves it on their laptop or mobile device
  6. The finance software updates the invoice's status and automatically routes the approved bill for payment
  7. An in-person employee processes the payment, the invoice is automatically marked as paid, and the information is synced via the cloud to the finance team’s accounting software

Benefits of a hybrid work model

A hybrid work model offers several benefits for both employees and the company. Employees enjoy increased flexibility and work-life balance, while companies can enjoy cost savings on real estate expenses and tap into a wider talent pool. The hybrid model also promotes employee engagement, which has been shown to increase productivity.

An inviting co-working space can encourage remote-first workers to come into the office more often while still allowing them to work remotely. For companies with satellite offices, a remote-first model may also encourage team bonding, allowing many employees to enjoy team meetings without the need for in-person work or an office environment.

What are the disadvantages of hybrid work?

Some of the biggest concerns for hybrid work include potential communication gaps between employees working remotely and in-office staff, difficulties maintaining a cohesive company culture with fewer in-person interactions, and the challenge of managing a flexible remote-work model. Additionally, when employees work remotely, they may experience feelings of isolation or struggle with setting boundaries between work and personal life.

A recent study of finance teams also surfaced several unique challenges in managing a remote workforce, including the ability to measure productivity, security concerns, and the ability to set performance evaluation standards.

To counter these concerns, hybrid work teams apply several best practices for a successful transition.

Hybrid work model best practices

  1. Establish clear communication channels: Ensure that all team members have access to the same information and are kept up-to-date on any changes or updates for remote work, hybrid work, or any combination of hybrid-remote
  2. Set expectations: Clearly define expectations for hybrid-remote teams and in-person staff, including hybrid-schedule working hours, availability, and responsibilities
  3. Encourage team-building: Foster connections between remote and in-person employees through virtual and in-person collaboration
  4. Prioritize mental health and well-being: Provide resources and support for employees to manage stress and maintain a healthy work-life balance, regardless of their work location
  5. Implement regular check-ins: Schedule frequent check-ins with both remote team members and in-office employees to monitor progress, address any challenges, and maintain open communication
  6. Embrace flexibility: Be open to adjusting the hybrid work schedule and processes as needed to better suit the needs of your team members and the organization
  7. Evaluate and iterate: Continuously assess the effectiveness of your hybrid work model and make necessary adjustments to improve employee satisfaction, productivity, and overall success

Hybrid work model examples

Revisiting the example of the finance team, it’s easy to see how their finance automation software helps them achieve several of these objectives without any extra effort:

  • Routing communications automatically to the right people
  • Providing a to-do list with clear action items for each team member
  • Storing and organizing information so it can be accessed by teammates on desktop, laptop, or mobile
  • Controlling access to that information with defined user roles
  • Letting employees work via computer or mobile device, from anywhere
  • Providing an additional layer of security via separation of duties

Improving hybrid work and remote work with finance automation

Finance automation can significantly enhance the hybrid working model of a finance team by streamlining processes, reducing manual tasks, and improving collaboration. Automated tools can handle tasks such as invoice data entry, payment scheduling, and expense tracking, freeing up time for remote and in-office employees to focus on higher-value activities. Additionally, automation can help reduce errors and improve the overall efficiency of the finance team.

How BILL helps hybrid remote work companies automate their finances

BILL’s finance automation platform can help hybrid work teams work seamlessly together. With features like optical character recognition (OCR) for automated invoice entry, payment approval routing according to defined business rules, and a time-stamped audit trail, BILL ensures that both remote employees and in-office staff can efficiently manage finances from anywhere.

The platform also adds another layer of security for hybrid instances by enforcing dual controls. By requiring one employee to initiate the payment and another to review and approve it, you gain more control and visibility over your payments, helping to reduce internal fraud. Features like two-factor authentication also help to protect sensitive information both at home and in the office.

By leveraging BILL, your hybrid workplace can save time, reduce manual errors, improve finance tracking, and streamline collaboration without missing a beat. To see how it works, try our interactive demo or sign up for a risk-free trial today.

Author
Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
Michael specializes in helping businesses optimize financial operations by staying up-to-date with industry trends and translating insights into real-world applications. With expertise in AP, cash flow, and fintech, Michael breaks down complex topics to help businesses continue to grow.
Author
Michael Davis
Contributing writer, BILL
Michael specializes in helping businesses optimize financial operations by staying up-to-date with industry trends and translating insights into real-world applications. With expertise in AP, cash flow, and fintech, Michael breaks down complex topics to help businesses continue to grow.
Get more from BILL
Subscribe to finance insights and thought leadership content delivered straight to your inbox.
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Software Comparison

BILL Spend & Expense
Best for AI expense automation
4.5 on G2
  • Smart corporate cards with real-time tracking, flexible limits, and instant visibility into every transaction across your team [1]
  • Unlimited free virtual cards with unique numbers for each vendor or subscription—freeze, delete, or set custom limits instantly to prevent overcharges and reduce fraud risk [5]
  • AI-powered auto-categorization and receipt matching that connects card transactions and expenses into a single reconciliation workflow [1]
  • Customizable budgets with spend controls based on merchant, amount, receipt requirements, and configurable approval workflows [3]
  • Auto-freeze on cards with incomplete transactions, ensuring receipts and documentation are captured before additional spend is approved [1]
  • Up to 7x points on restaurants, 5x on hotels, 2x on recurring software, and 1.5x on all other purchases (rates shown are for weekly or daily billing cycle; rates vary by billing frequency) [2]
  • Two-way sync with QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, and Microsoft Dynamics; additional integrations with Acumatica, Slack, and HRIS platforms [1]

Pros

  • $0/user/month with all features included—no paid tier to unlock [4]
  • Merchant controls and auto-freeze cards at no extra cost [1]
  • Credit lines that don't fluctuate daily based on bank balance [4]
  • All ERP integrations (NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero) included free [1]

Cons

  • 12-month holding period before rewards can be redeemed [2]
  • Category reward multipliers cap at $5,000/month per category [2]
  • Less established in global, enterprise-scale expense programs with multi-country regulatory requirements

BILL Spend & Expense pairs corporate cards with AI-powered expense management and budget controls in a single platform at no cost—teams aren't paying per user or upgrading to unlock features that competitors gate behind paid tiers.

Merchant-level spend controls and auto-freeze on incomplete transactions give admins granular oversight without manual policing, and two-way ERP integrations are included free where Ramp and Brex charge for NetSuite and Sage Intacct access. The main trade-off is an initial 12-month rewards holding period before accumulated points can be redeemed. [1][2][3][4]

Commonly compared to: Ramp and Brex (for card-first expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

Pricing
$0/user/month with no annual fee
Integrations
Two-way sync with QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, and Microsoft
Ideal company size
SMB to mid-market
SAP Concur
Best for large enterprises
4 on G2
  • AI-powered receipt capture via ExpenseIt on the SAP Concur mobile app, with smart matching that combines credit card charges and e-receipts into expense reports automatically [7]
  • Configurable approval workflows with built-in audit rules that flag policy exceptions, plus optional Intelligent Audit and Verify add-ons for automated compliance checks [6][7]
  • Modular product suite: Concur Expense, Concur Travel, and Concur Invoice are separate products that can be purchased individually or together, so organizations can start with expense management and add capabilities over time [6]
  • Bank card feed integrations that import corporate card transactions directly into expense reports for automatic reconciliation [6]
  • Joule, SAP's AI assistant, for expense report review, spend analysis, and cost estimation [6]
  • Budget tracking and monitoring tools that give finance teams visibility into spend against departmental or project-level budgets [6]
  • Support for global operations with multi-currency expense reporting and country-specific tax and regulatory compliance tools [6]

Pros

  • 300+ pre-built integrations including native SAP ERP sync [7][8]
  • Global coverage with multi-currency and regulatory compliance tools [6]
  • Modular—add travel or invoice management without switching platforms [6]
  • AI-powered receipt capture and smart matching via ExpenseIt [7]

Cons

  • Quote-based pricing; no published rates on the website [6]
  • No corporate card offering; relies on bank card feed integrations [6]
  • Implementation can be complex for smaller organizations [6]
  • Live support requires purchasing the User Support Desk service [6]

SAP Concur is the incumbent in expense management software, with the largest partner ecosystem and broadest global footprint on this list. Its modular approach gives large organizations flexibility to start with expense management and layer on travel or invoice capabilities independently.

The trade-off is complexity—pricing is opaque, there's no corporate card offering, and smaller teams may find the platform more than they need. Organizations already in the SAP ecosystem will get the most value from native S/4HANA integration. [6][7][8]

Commonly compared to: BILL (for SMB expense management), and Coupa (for enterprise spend management).

Pricing
Quote-based
Integrations
QuickBooks, Xero, Sage,TSheets, Gusto, & most business credit cards.
Ideal Company Size
Mid-market to enterprise
Ramp
Best for a broad spend platform
4.8 on G2
  • Corporate cards with customizable spend controls by merchant, category, employee, or department, plus unlimited virtual and physical cards [9][10]
  • AI-powered receipt matching, transaction coding, and memo suggestions that auto-populate as soon as a card is swiped [9]
  • Policy agent that reviews every expense against company policy, auto-approves compliant transactions, and escalates only exceptions with full audit trail [9]
  • Expense submission via SMS, Slack, or Microsoft Teams in addition to web and mobile app [9]
  • Reimbursements for out-of-pocket expenses paid to employees' bank accounts in 1–2 business days [9]
  • Real-time spend reporting with custom dashboards, natural-language queries, and proactive overspend alerts [9]
  • Broader spend platform that includes AP automation, procurement, vendor management, and treasury alongside expense management [9]

Pros

  • Free plan includes corporate cards, expenses, and bill pay [11]
  • AI policy agent reviews 100% of expenses automatically [9]
  • Submit expenses via SMS, Slack, or Teams—no app required [9]
  • Broader spend platform covers AP, procurement, and vendor management [9]

Cons

  • Budget tracking requires Ramp Plus at $15/user/month [11]
  • NetSuite, Sage Intacct, and Dynamics integrations require a paid plan [11]
  • HRIS syncs and auto-lock cards require a paid plan [11]
  • Credit limits fluctuate daily based on connected bank balance [12]

Ramp's strength is breadth—it's not just an expense tool but a full spend management platform that includes AP automation, procurement, and vendor management alongside expenses. The AI policy agent is a differentiator, reviewing every transaction against company rules rather than relying on manual manager approvals.

The trade-off is that several features mid-market teams rely on—budget tracking, ERP integrations beyond QuickBooks and Xero, and HRIS syncs—require upgrading to Ramp Plus at $15/user/month plus a platform fee. [9][11]

Commonly compared to: Brex and BILL (for corporate cards and expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

Pricing
$0/user/month
Integrations
QuickBooks, NetSuite, Xero, Sage Intacct, Slack, & 100+ accounting tools.
Ideal Company Size
Startups to mid-market
Brex
Best for global teams
4.8 on G2
  • Corporate cards with customizable spend limits by role, department, or category, plus auto-approve for in-policy expenses and auto-decline for out-of-policy spend [13][14]
  • AI-powered expense reviews that auto-approve compliant transactions and surface only exceptions for human review, with clear visibility into why a transaction is flagged [13]
  • Auto-generated receipts and memos with OCR that matches receipts in any language or currency, plus automatic GL coding by department, project, and entity [13]
  • Live Budgets that let department heads set top-level budgets, provision spend to individuals or teams, and track usage in real time with anomaly detection [13]
  • Global reimbursements in 70+ countries in employees' local currency, with subsidiaries able to issue reimbursements from local bank accounts [13]
  • Expense submission and approval via Slack and WhatsApp, with in-app commenting on individual transactions [13]
  • Broader financial platform that includes bill pay, business banking with up to 3.68% yield, and treasury alongside expense management [14]

Pros

  • Free plan includes corporate cards, expenses, bill pay, and travel [15]
  • AI expense reviews with 99% average policy compliance rate [14]
  • Global reimbursements in 70+ countries in local currency [13]
  • Live Budgets with real-time tracking and anomaly detection [13]

Cons

  • Live Budgets require Premium at $12/user/month [15]
  • HRIS syncs and customizable ERP integrations require a paid plan [15]
  • Credit limits fluctuate daily based on connected bank balance [16]
  • Multiple expense policies and dynamic review chains require Premium [15]

Brex positions itself as a full financial stack for startups—cards, expenses, banking, and treasury in one platform. The AI expense reviews and 99% average compliance rate (per Brex's internal metrics) are notable, and the global reimbursement coverage across 70+ countries is broader than most competitors on this list.

Like Ramp, Brex gates budget management and HRIS integrations behind a paid tier, and credit limits fluctuate daily based on your bank balance. Teams that need predictable spending power or are past the startup stage may find the pricing structure adds up. [13][14][15]

Commonly compared to: Ramp and BILL (for corporate cards and expense management), and SAP Concur (for enterprise expense programs).

Pricing
$0/user/month
Integrations
NetSuite, QuickBooks, Workday,SAP Concur, Slack, & global banking portals.
Ideal Company Size
Startups to mid-market
Expensify
Best for simple reimbursements
4.5 on G2
  • SmartScan receipt capture by photo, email forwarding (receipts@expensify.com), or text message; auto-extracts transaction details and categorizes expenses [17]
  • Bring-your-own-card support: link existing corporate cards from 10,000+ banks globally for automatic reconciliation without switching card providers [17]
  • Expensify Visa Commercial Card with cash back on US purchases; cash back first offsets the Expensify subscription cost, then flows to the company's bank account [17]
  • Concierge AI for automated expense categorization, policy violation flagging, rule enforcement, and error reduction [17]
  • Global reimbursements for employees and independent contractors in their local currency [17]
  • Chat-based collaboration directly on individual expenses to resolve questions in real time rather than through email follow-ups [17]
  • 45+ integrations including QuickBooks, NetSuite, Sage Intacct, Xero, Workday, and Gusto [17]

Pros

  • Bring-your-own-card from 10,000+ banks globally [17]
  • Expensify Card cash back can offset the subscription cost [17]
  • SmartScan receipt capture by photo, email, or text message [17]
  • 45+ integrations including major ERPs and payroll systems [17]

Cons

  • No free plan; starts at $5/user/month [18]
  • Pricing structure varies by card spend volume [18]
  • Budget management, advanced approvals, and expense policies require Collect or Control plans [17]
  • No department-level budget management on par with card-first platforms

Expensify's strength is accessibility—it has the lowest barrier to entry for teams that just need to start tracking expenses and submitting receipts. The bring-your-own-card support from 10,000+ banks means companies don't have to switch card providers, and the SmartScan receipt capture (by photo, email, or text) is one of the more flexible input methods on this list.

The trade-off is that several features mid-market teams expect—budget management, advanced approvals, and expense policies—require upgrading to the Collect or Control plans, and spend controls are primarily limited to the Expensify Card rather than extending across all connected cards. [17][18]

Commonly compared to: Zoho Expense (for budget-friendly expense management), and BILL and Ramp (for integrated cards and expenses).

Pricing
From $5/user/month
Integrations
QuickBooks, Xero, Sage, TSheets, Gusto, & most business credit cards.
Ideal Company Size
Small to mid-market
Zoho Expense
Best for budget-conscious teams
4.5 on G2
  • Autoscan receipt capture with OCR that auto-categorizes and itemizes each expense, plus the ability to split or tag expenses across departments, projects, or cost centers [19][20]
  • Automated per diem calculations with pre-defined rules based on country, location, and trip details for regional compliance [20]
  • Corporate card management with real-time feeds that automatically match transactions to uploaded receipts for faster reconciliation [20]
  • Mileage tracking with four input methods across Android, iPhone, and Apple Watch [20]
  • Configurable approval workflows, expense policies, and audit rules with detailed audit trails for compliance [19][20]
  • Custom modules, workflow automation, webhooks, and configurable UI elements for businesses that need tailored expense processes [19]
  • Active-user pricing model: only employees who actually create expenses are charged, so admins and approvers who don't submit reports are free [21]

Pros

  • Free plan available for up to 3 users with core expense tracking [21]
  • Active-user pricing—admins and approvers aren't charged [21]
  • Automated per diem calculations by country and location [20]
  • Deep customization with custom modules and workflow automation [19]

Cons

  • Corporate card feeds and multi-level approvals require Standard plan [21]
  • Deepest value requires the broader Zoho ecosystem (Books, People, CRM) [19]
  • No corporate card offering; relies on connecting existing cards [20]
  • Travel booking, per diem, and live budgets require Premium plan [21]

Zoho Expense offers unusually deep customization at a low price point—custom modules, workflow automation, webhooks, and configurable UI elements that most competitors don't expose. The active-user pricing model is genuinely cost-effective for companies where only a portion of employees submit expenses regularly.

The trade-off is that there's no corporate card offering—you'll need to connect your existing cards—and the platform delivers its deepest value when used alongside other Zoho products like Zoho Books and Zoho People. [19][20][21]

Commonly compared to: Expensify (for budget-friendly expense management), and SAP Concur (for global compliance and customization).

Pricing
Free (3 users); from $4/user/month
Integrations
Zoho Books, QuickBooks, Xero, Sage, Microsoft Dynamics, & Google Workspace.
Ideal Company Size
Small to mid-market

Software Comparison

BILL Accounts Payable
Best for AI-powered automation
This is some text inside of a div block.
  • AI-powered invoice coding that automatically extracts and codes multi-line items with 99% accuracy, reducing manual processing time by approximately 20% [1][3]
  • Customizable approval workflows with routing based on business rules, real-time tracking, automated reminders, and mobile-friendly approvals [1]
  • Payment options including ACH, credit card, check, and international wire transfers across 130+ countries, with $0 wire fees for local currency payments [1][5]
  • Predictive fraud detection monitoring transactions in real-time, processing 5M+ predictions daily across 300M+ network transactions [1]
  • Automated 2-way and 3-way matching across invoices, purchase orders, and receipts, with configurable tolerance limits [1][6]
  • BILL Cash Account with 3% APY and next-day ACH payments; bulk processing of up to 2,000 bills at once [1]

Pros

  • AI agents automate coding, W-9 collection, and reconciliation [3][4]
  • 99% accuracy on key invoice fields [1]
  • 130+ countries for international payments [5]
  • 93% of users report ease of use [1]

Cons

  • Starts at $49/user/month; no free AP tier [2]
  • Per-transaction fees apply (e.g., $0.59 per ACH) [2]
  • Procurement features require Corporate plan or higher, or an add-on fee at lower levels [2]
  • Some ERP integrations require Enterprise tier [2]

BILL's strength in AP automation is its combination of AI agents and network scale. The platform has processed over 1.3 billion documents and stopped 8 million fraud attempts, with AI agents that autonomously handle invoice coding, W-9 collection, and transaction reconciliation—not just data extraction. [3][4] The 93% ease-of-use rating and two-week time-to-value make it accessible without a lengthy implementation, and benefits extend beyond AP with accounts receivable available on the same platform. [1][2]

Commonly compared to: Ramp and Tipalti (for mid-market AP automation).

Pricing
$49/user/month [2]
Integrations
Two-way sync with QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks Enterprise, QuickBooks Desktop, Xero, Oracle NetSuite, Sage Intacct, and Microsoft Dynamics, plus custom file integration and API access [1][2]
Ideal company size
SMB to enterprise
Ramp
Best for essential AP automation
This is some text inside of a div block.
  • Invoice OCR with 99% accuracy for capturing details and line items, with bulk processing from PDFs, scans, and emails [7][9]
  • Four AI agents on paid tiers: Auto-Coding, Fraud Prevention, Approval, and Automatic Payment for touchless invoice processing [9]
  • Payment options including ACH, same-day ACH, checks, virtual cards, and international wires; eligible transaction fees waived when paying from a Ramp Business Account [7][8]
  • Customizable approval workflows with routing by amount, department, vendor type, and role-based permissions [7]
  • Two-way and three-way PO matching, duplicate detection, and recurring bill automation [9]
  • Automated W-9 collection and 1099 IRS filing at $0.65 per filing [7][8]

    Pros

    • Core plan with no base software cost [8]
    • 99% OCR accuracy on invoice capture [7]
    • Unified platform covers AP, cards, expenses, and travel [7]
    • Per-user pricing, not per-transaction [8]

    Cons

    • Full AI features require Plus plan at $15/user/month [8]
    • NetSuite and Sage integrations require a paid tier [8]
    • Multi-entity support requires Plus or Enterprise [8]
    • Plus plan includes a platform fee on top of per-user cost [8]

    Ramp's reported free tier covers basic AP automation—OCR capture, approval workflows, and multiple payment methods with no base software cost, though per-transaction fees apply. The trade-off is that Ramp reports several features mid-market teams typically need—AI auto-coding, ERP integrations beyond QuickBooks and Xero, and multi-entity support—to require upgrading to Ramp Plus at $15/user/month plus a platform fee. Ramp's advertised feature package is strongest when used as a unified platform across AP, cards, and expenses rather than as a standalone AP tool. [7][8][9]

    Commonly compared to: BILL and Tipalti (for mid-market AP automation).

    Pricing
    $0/user/month [8]
    Integrations
    Free tier: QuickBooks and Xero. Plus adds Oracle NetSuite and Sage Intacct. Enterprise adds Workday and Oracle Fusion Cloud. [8]
    Ideal Company Size
    Startups to mid-market
    Tipalti
    Best for global payables
    This is some text inside of a div block.
    • Payments across 200+ countries and territories in 120+ currencies with 50+ payment methods including the Tipalti Card [10][12]
    • Supplier self-service onboarding portal available in 27 languages with automated tax form collection and validation [10]
    • AI-powered invoice capture supporting 145+ languages, with auto-coding and approval routing [10]
    • Two-way and three-way PO matching with reconciliation against ERP systems [10]
    • Global tax compliance with validation across 60+ countries [10][11]
    • FX hedging and multi-currency fund management on higher tiers [11]

      Pros

      • 200+ countries, 120 currencies, 50+ payment methods [10]
      • Unlimited users on all plans [11]
      • Supplier portal in 27 languages [10]
      • IDC MarketScape Leader for midmarket AP automation [10]

      Cons

      • Starts at $99/month—higher entry than some alternatives [11]
      • PO matching requires Advanced plan at $199/month [11]
      • Custom ERP integrations only on Elevate tier [11]
      • No free tier or trial mentioned on pricing page [11]

      Tipalti reports a strong feature listis the strongest option on this list for businesses with significant international payment needs. The combination of 200+ countries, 120 currencies, and a supplier portal in 27 languages as listed on its website will be attractive tomakes it purpose-built for global AP operations in a way that general-purpose AP tools are not. Customers profiled on the site report up to 80% reduction in AP workflow time. [10] The trade-off is complexity and cost—according to Tipalti's materials, the full global feature set requires the Advanced plan at $199/month or higher, and there is no listed free tier to start with.

      Commonly compared to: BILL and Stampli (for mid-market AP), and Coupa (for enterprise procurement).

      Pricing
      $99/month [11]
      Integrations
      Native integrations with Oracle NetSuite, Sage Intacct, SAP, Microsoft Dynamics 365, and QuickBooks; custom ERP integrations available via Professional Services on the Elevate tier [10][11]
      Ideal Company Size
      Mid-market to enterprise
      Stampli
      Best for deep ERP integration
      This is some text inside of a div block.
      • Stampli Cognitive AI automates invoice capture, GL coding, PO matching, and approval routing with an 86% automation rate across 2,500+ fields [13][15]
      • In-house ERP integrations with 13+ systems including SAP, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics, Sage Intacct, QuickBooks, NetSuite, and Acumatica [13]
      • Built-in collaboration tools for team communication directly on invoices—questions, discussions, and approvals happen in one place [13]
      • Stampli Direct Pay for check, ACH, wire, and international payments [13]
      • 12 pre-built analytics reports with interactive dashboards and full audit trails [13]
      • Vendor management with secure onboarding and compliance enforcement [13]

      Pros

      • 86% automation rate across 2,500+ unique fields [15]
      • All ERP integrations built in-house, not third-party [13]
      • Team collaboration directly on invoices [13]
      • Dedicated Customer Success Manager included [14]

      Cons

      • Quote-based pricing with no published rates [14]
      • Cognitive AI is an upgrade, not included in base tier [14]
      • Smaller vendor network than platform-based competitors
      • Less focus on payment execution than dedicated AP tools

      Stampli's reported in-house ERP integrations and the ability for teams to discuss and resolve invoice questions directly on the document appear to beare genuine differentiators for organizations with complex approval workflows. The listed 86% automation rate is strong, though the Cognitive AI tier is stated to require an upgrade—and the lack of published pricing means teams will need a sales conversation to evaluate cost. [13][14][15]

      Commonly compared to: BILL and Tipalti (for mid-market AP automation).

      Pricing
      Quote-based [14]
      Integrations
      In-house integrations with SAP, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics 365, Sage Intacct, QuickBooks, Oracle NetSuite, and Acumatica—verified as a Sage Recommended Solution and Built for NetSuite provider [13]
      Ideal Company Size
      Mid-market to enterprise
      Melio
      Best for simple bill pay
      This is some text inside of a div block.
      • Bill capture via email or import with auto-fill for vendor details, amounts, line items, and due dates [16]
      • Card-to-ACH conversion—pay vendors by credit card even when they only accept bank transfers, earning card rewards on every bill [16]
      • Approval workflows with role-based permissions for team review and payment authorization [16]
      • Mobile app for sending and tracking payments on the go [16]
      • W-9 and 1099 management with centralized tax form handling [16]
      • Pay Over Time feature that lets vendors get paid now while the payer repays on their own schedule [16]

      Pros

      • Free plan available for a single user with 5 ACH/month [17]
      • Pay by card even when vendors don't accept cards [16]
      • Mobile app for sending and tracking payments [16]
      • W-9 and 1099 management included on paid plans [16]

      Cons

      • $0.50 per ACH transfer after free monthly allowance [17]
      • Limited to QuickBooks, Xero, and Amazon Business [16]
      • International payment options are limited [16]

      Melio appears to be the most accessible option on this list for small businesses that just need to pay bills. The reported card-to-ACH conversion feature lets businesses earn credit card rewards on vendor payments even when vendors don't accept cards, while deferring payment to the next billing cycle for cash flow flexibility. [16] (BILL does this too with BILL Pay By Card.) The trade-off is depth: Melio seems to lacklacks AI invoice coding, PO matching, and ERP integrations that growing businesses typically need, which may require migrating to a more capable platform as AP volume increases. [16][17]

      Commonly compared to: BILL and Ramp (for small business AP).

      Pricing
      $0/month [17]
      Integrations
      QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks Desktop (Boost plan and above), Xero, and Amazon Business, with automatic two-way sync [16]
      Ideal Company Size
      Small businesses
      Yooz
      Best for per-document pricing
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      • AI-powered smart data extraction with self-learning GL, tax, and dimension allocations that improve over time [18][20]
      • Omnichannel invoice capture via email, mobile app, scan-to-email, SFTP, and vendor portals [18]
      • PO creation and matching with configurable approval workflows and dynamic routing [18]
      • YoozProtect fraud detection with fake document detection, duplicate detection, and IBAN/account verification [18]
      • Vendor statement reconciliation with AI-powered matching and discrepancy detection [18]
      • No-code workflow configuration with Google-like document search across all invoices [18]

      Pros

      • Unlimited users for Gold Edition [19]
      • Per-document pricing scales with volume, not headcount [19]
      • 250+ ERP and financial system integrations [18]
      • Free 15-day trial in a production environment [19]

      Cons

      • Per-document costs can be hard to predict with volume spikes
      • Less robust vendor network than platform-based competitor
      • No combined AP and AR capability [18]
      • Payment execution features are less detailed than competitors

      Yooz reports a pricing model that's unique on this list: per-document rather than per-user. For organizations with large AP teams processing high invoice volumes, this could be more cost-effective than per-seat licensing—especially since unlimited users seem to be included. The AI-powered self-learning capabilities listed on the site say that they improve accuracy over time, and 250+ listed integrations make it compatible with most accounting environments. [18][19] The platform claims to increase productivity by 80%. [18][20]

      Commonly compared to: BILL and Stampli (for mid-market AP automation).

      Pricing
      $1.99/document [19]
      Integrations
      250+ ERP and financial system integrations including Sage Intacct, Oracle NetSuite, QuickBooks, Microsoft Dynamics 365, Acumatica, and CDK [18]
      Ideal Company Size
      SMB to enterprise