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Hands-on review · May 2026

DualEntry review 2026

An AI-native ERP built ground-up around machine learning for mid-market firms (50–1,000 employees), filling the gap between SMB-focused tools like QuickBooks and legacy platforms like NetSuite.

DualEntry
DualEntry New York, NY, USA AI-Native

Our verdict

Ranked #14 of 19 overall · #4 in AI-Native

Built for mid-market firms caught between SMB tools and legacy ERPs, with a genuinely AI-native GL; a short track record, custom-only pricing, and maturing international features are the risk.

The numbers

Scored across our five weighted criteria
Automation · 30% 92
Pricing value · 25% 42
Integrations · 20% 55
Satisfaction · 15% 90
AI innovation · 10% 90

Pricing

Plans, verified May 2026
Growth
Custom/mo
  • Mid-market firms
  • Up to 5 entities
  • AI ledger + reporting
Scale
Custom/mo
  • Multi-entity consolidation
  • Advanced AI workflows
  • Dedicated success manager
Enterprise
Contact Sales/mo
  • Unlimited entities
  • Custom integrations
  • SLA + premium support

Pros & cons

From our hands-on testing

What we liked

  • AI-native general ledger automating 90%+ of workflows
  • Autonomous categorization with confidence scoring
  • AI multi-entity consolidation and real-time close

What to watch

  • Newer entrant — limited track record vs Sage Intacct or NetSuite for risk-averse mid-market buyers
  • Custom pricing only; no transparent SMB-friendly entry tier
  • Smaller accountant ecosystem than QuickBooks/Xero (fewer CPAs trained on the platform)
  • Multi-currency and international compliance features are still maturing vs Xero/Sage
  • Limited third-party app integrations compared to QuickBooks ecosystem

Signature AI

The features behind its 90/100 AI score

AI-native general ledger, 90%+ workflow automation

AI-native general ledger (automation across 90%+ of standard workflows)
Autonomous transaction categorization with confidence scoring
AI multi-entity consolidation
Anomaly detection on journal entries
Real-time financial close (continuous accounting)

Stephan Kulik

Editor-in-Chief, LedgerLab

Last reviewed:  ·  LinkedIn profile  ·  Report an error

Overview

DualEntry is an AI-native ERP launched in 2023 targeting mid-market firms (50-1000 employees) — the segment that has long been stuck choosing between SMB-focused tools that don't scale (QuickBooks, Xero) and legacy mid-market platforms that feel built in 2005 (NetSuite, Sage Intacct). The pitch: a modern general ledger built ground-up around machine learning, automating ~90% of traditional accounting workflows with autonomous transaction categorization, multi-entity consolidation, and continuous close.

In 2026, DualEntry has become a visible name in mid-market evaluations alongside Sage Intacct and NetSuite — primarily because the AI-native positioning resonates with finance teams that have seen what AI can do in QuickBooks Intuit Assist and want a platform that bakes it deeper into the core ledger rather than layering it on top.

Key Features

  • AI-native general ledger that automates ~90% of traditional workflows
  • Intelligent multi-entity consolidation across subsidiaries
  • Autonomous transaction categorization with confidence scoring
  • Real-time financial close (continuous accounting)
  • AI-driven anomaly detection on transactions and journal entries
  • Native integrations with banking + payment + payroll providers
  • Audit-trail-grade documentation for SOX/SOC compliance
  • API-first architecture for embedding accounting into product workflows

The headline capability is the AI-native general ledger: rather than retrofitting AI onto a 30-year-old GL architecture, DualEntry built the GL with confidence-scored categorization, anomaly detection, and continuous close as first-class primitives. In practice this means closing a month doesn't have to be a discrete event — the close is continuously valid, with the AI flagging only the transactions that need human attention.

For mid-market firms, the second headline capability is multi-entity consolidation. Parent-subsidiary structures, intercompany eliminations, and consolidated financial statements are native rather than bolt-on. This is the capability that QuickBooks Online famously lacks and where Sage Intacct and NetSuite have traditionally won — DualEntry positions explicitly against them on this dimension.

Pricing

DualEntry uses custom pricing only — no transparent SMB-style tiers. Pricing is typically structured per entity, per user, and per transaction volume, with custom-quote ranges for the Growth, Scale, and Enterprise tiers. Practical pricing range in 2026 for mid-market firms: $2,000-15,000/month depending on entity count and volume.

Compared to NetSuite (typically $5,000-40,000/month all-in) or Sage Intacct ($1,200-5,000/month base + module add-ons), DualEntry's pricing is competitive at the lower end of the mid-market and benefits from the AI-driven cost-of-ownership argument (less staff time on categorization and close).

AI Capabilities

  • AI-native general ledger (automation across 90%+ of standard workflows)
  • Autonomous transaction categorization with confidence scoring
  • AI multi-entity consolidation
  • Anomaly detection on journal entries
  • Real-time financial close (continuous accounting)

DualEntry's AI is more deeply integrated than the AI layers in QuickBooks or Xero, simply because the platform was built around it. The confidence scoring on every categorized transaction is a useful UX detail — instead of a binary "AI categorized this" tag, you see a confidence percentage, and the platform routes low-confidence transactions for review automatically. For mid-market controllers managing high-volume ledgers, this is materially better than the bolt-on AI experiences in legacy platforms.

Real-world auto-categorization accuracy on configured deployments: 92-96% per third-party reviews, edging out QuickBooks (~85-90%) and Xero (~80-85%) for general-purpose use, though still behind industry-tuned platforms like Docyt (~95-97% for hospitality).

Who Should Use DualEntry?

DualEntry is the right choice if you're a mid-market firm (50-1000 employees) with multi-entity complexity and you've outgrown QuickBooks but find NetSuite and Sage Intacct culturally mismatched with how a modern finance team wants to work. The AI-native architecture is genuinely differentiated, and the multi-entity capability is competitive with Sage Intacct.

DualEntry is not the right choice if you're an SMB under 50 employees (use QuickBooks, Xero, or Zeni for venture-backed startups), if you're a risk-averse buyer who needs a 20-year track record (use NetSuite or Sage Intacct), or if you need deep international compliance across many markets (use Xero for international SMB or NetSuite for enterprise).

Alternatives to Consider

  • For mid-market with established track-record requirements: Sage Intacct or NetSuite
  • For accounting firms managing multi-client books: Docyt
  • For SMBs not yet at mid-market complexity: Xero or QuickBooks Online
  • For AP automation as a layer: Vic.ai

Verdict

DualEntry is one of the more interesting 2026 entrants in mid-market accounting — and one of the few legitimate AI-native ERP plays rather than a bolt-on. The platform earns serious consideration for mid-market firms with multi-entity needs that want a modern stack. The trade-off is track record: at three years old, DualEntry doesn't yet have the 15-20 years of mid-market deployment learnings that NetSuite and Sage Intacct can claim.

For risk-tolerant mid-market buyers who want to be early on an AI-native ERP trajectory, DualEntry is competitive. For risk-averse buyers, wait another 2-3 years or pair DualEntry with a parallel deployment of a legacy ERP as fallback.

How we tested: we run every platform through identical real-world bookkeeping workflows and score it on Automation (30%), Pricing value (25%), Integrations (20%), Satisfaction (15%) and AI innovation (10%), citing third-party ratings from G2, Capterra and Trustpilot alongside our own notes. Read our full methodology →

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Frequently Asked Questions

How is DualEntry priced?

DualEntry uses custom pricing only across its Growth, Scale, and Enterprise tiers — there are no transparent SMB-style entry prices. The review notes a practical pricing range for mid-market firms in 2026 of $2,000 to $15,000 per month depending on entity count and transaction volume. For comparison, the review positions this as competitive at the lower end of the mid-market relative to NetSuite, which typically runs $5,000 to $40,000 per month all-in.

What AI capabilities does DualEntry actually offer?

DualEntry was built ground-up around machine learning rather than retrofitting AI onto a legacy general ledger architecture. The AI-native general ledger uses confidence-scored categorization as a first-class primitive, automatically routing low-confidence transactions for review. The platform claims automation across roughly 90% of standard accounting workflows, and real-world auto-categorization accuracy on configured deployments sits at 92 to 96% according to third-party reviews cited in the review body — ahead of QuickBooks and Xero for general-purpose use.

Who is DualEntry designed for, and who is a bad fit?

DualEntry targets mid-market firms with 50 to 1,000 employees that have outgrown QuickBooks but find NetSuite and Sage Intacct culturally mismatched with how a modern finance team wants to work. Multi-entity consolidation, parent-subsidiary structures, and intercompany eliminations are native capabilities rather than bolt-ons. It is not the right choice for SMBs under 50 employees, risk-averse buyers who need a 20-year track record, or companies requiring deep international compliance across many markets.

What is the biggest watchout when evaluating DualEntry?

The primary trade-off is track record: DualEntry was founded in 2023, which means it has roughly three years of real-world mid-market deployments versus the 15 to 20 years that NetSuite and Sage Intacct can claim. The review notes a smaller accountant ecosystem — fewer CPAs trained on the platform — and multi-currency and international compliance features that are still maturing. For risk-averse buyers, the recommendation is to wait another two to three years or treat DualEntry as an evaluation alongside a legacy ERP fallback.

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