Skip to content
Z Zendikt
Category

Corporate Card Software

Independent 2026 ranking of B2B corporate card platforms, verified pricing, FX and partner-bank realities, an honest Ramp vs Brex read, plus EU/US splits.

Products tracked: 10
Last verified: 2026-05-23
Re-verified every 90 days
Editorial verdict
Read full deep-dive

Corporate cards in 2026 are no longer a card-only product, every credible platform now ships software-led expense and spend controls on top of the card. Ramp leads the US SMB-to-mid market on product velocity, free baseline, and 1.5% cashback funded by interchange. Brex is the credible #2 for venture-backed and globally distributed teams via Brex Empower, but the 2022 US-SMB exit, 2023-2024 customer-churn signal in G2 reviews, and 2024 AI-product reset destabilised the roadmap and still appear in buyer due diligence. Mercury IO has expanded from banking-first into a credible card platform for VC-backed early-stage. Stripe Issuing is the BaaS layer powering many programs (including some on this list), not a direct SMB card, buyers should understand that distinction before shortlisting it against Ramp/Brex. Navan Liquid leads travel-driven corporate cards. Bento for Business covers the very-small-business segment Ramp/Brex have left behind. Divvy by BILL and Airbase are both bundled with bigger platforms following acquisitions (BILL 2021, Paylocity Oct 2024), with SMB-segment churn already visible in 2024 G2 reviews. Pleo and Spendesk anchor the European mid-market with FCA/ACPR licenses; both took valuation resets after the 2021-2022 peak. This category is distinct from spend management (the software layer atop cards, covered at /top-10-spend-management-software) and expense management (reimbursement-led, covered at /top-10-expense-management-software).

All 10 products, ranked

Sort: Editorial rank · · ·
  1. #1

    Ramp

    G2 4.8 (2,480)

    Free corporate card with the fastest product velocity in category.

    Ramp is the US corporate card category leader by adoption pace and product velocity, founded 2019, last valued $13B+ at the Series E in 2024. The card is a Visa charge card issued via Celtic Bank as the partner bank, with cashback (1.5% on all purchases at the baseline tier as disclosed on the Ramp pricing page) funded by interchange. Strengths: free baseline platform (cards + expense + receipt capture + GL sync), the cleanest reviewer sentiment of any modern card platform, AI-driven controls that work, and a deep US accounting-integration footprint. Trade-offs: international card issuance is narrower than Brex (US-strongest with Canada and UK rolled out, with limited EU/APAC); the card-program economics depend on the buyer pushing meaningful spend through Ramp to fund the free tier; and growth velocity has periodically stretched customer support response times in 2024-2025 G2 reviews. Cashback rates above 1.5% on specific merchant categories vary by program and are disclosed only after onboarding.

    Pricing
    ◐ Partial
    Vendor trust
    8.4/10
    Best fit
    10–1,000
    Reviews analyzed
    2,480
    Interested in Ramp?
  2. #2

    Brex

    G2 4.6 (1,880)

    Global card issuance for venture-backed teams, with documented trust history.

    Brex is the original startup corporate card, founded 2017, last priced at $12.3B in the 2022 Series D2; subsequent secondary-market valuation reset signals have been reported in 2023 and 2024 but the company has not publicly confirmed a new primary round at a revised price. The card is a charge card issued via partner bank arrangements, and Brex Empower extends issuance to more countries than Ramp (US, Canada, UK, EU, with selective APAC). The strengths are real and well-documented: strongest international card issuance among modern peers, mature multi-currency settlement, Brex Cash for VC-backed banking, and broad portfolio-company adoption across YC and tier-1 VCs. The trade-offs are equally documented and surface in nearly every 2024-2026 buyer due diligence cycle: the June 2022 exit from US SMB segment churned thousands of smaller customers with limited notice; an October 2022 layoff of approximately 140 staff (around 11% of headcount) reduced customer-side capacity and is cited in slower support-response complaints in 2023-2024 G2 reviews; and a 2024 AI-product reset destabilised the roadmap (multiple features announced and later quietly deprioritised, cited in Reddit r/Startups threads). Brex remains the right answer for venture-backed and globally distributed teams, but buyers should factor the trust history into the renewal decision.

    Pricing
    ◐ Partial
    Vendor trust
    6.9/10
    Best fit
    50–2,000
    Reviews analyzed
    1,880
    Interested in Brex?
  3. #3

    Mercury IO

    G2 4.6 (1,480)

    Banking-anchored corporate card for venture-backed early-stage.

    Mercury is the banking-first platform that has expanded into a credible corporate card offering, founded 2017, $120M Series B in 2021 at a $1.6B valuation (the last publicly reported primary round). The Mercury IO card platform, expanded substantially in 2024-2025 alongside Mercury IO developer APIs, sits on top of Mercury Business Banking with FDIC pass-through via partner banks (Choice Financial Group and Evolve Bank & Trust historically; the partner-bank composition was reshuffled in 2024). The strengths are clear: unified banking + cards on one login, the cleanest UX in the venture-backed banking segment, Mercury Treasury for yield-bearing accounts, and a developer-friendly API for builders. The trade-offs are equally clear: card-controls depth is thinner than Ramp/Brex (catching up but not at parity); the 2024 partner-bank transition caused customer-impacting disruptions that the company publicly acknowledged; and post-startup scaling is a known ceiling, Mercury is built for venture-backed early-stage, not the mid-market that Ramp and Brex target.

    Pricing
    ● Transparent
    Vendor trust
    7.9/10
    Best fit
    5–200
    Reviews analyzed
    1,480
    Interested in Mercury IO?
  4. #4

    Stripe Issuing

    G2 4.4 (320)

    BaaS card issuing for platforms, not a direct SMB corporate card.

    Stripe Issuing is Banking-as-a-Service card issuing infrastructure, founded as a Stripe product in 2018. It is included here with a deliberate caveat: this is NOT a direct corporate card for SMBs in the way Ramp, Brex, or Mercury are. Stripe Issuing is the underlying infrastructure that platforms (marketplaces, fintechs, vertical SaaS) use to build their own card programs, Shopify Balance, Substack, and several vendors on this very list rely on Stripe Issuing or a comparable BaaS layer (Marqeta, Lithic) under the hood. The strengths are real for the intended buyer: developer-grade APIs consistent with the broader Stripe ecosystem, multi-region issuance (US, EU, UK, Canada, plus selective additional markets), tokenization for Apple Pay / Google Pay, and the operational scale of running on Stripe infrastructure. The trade-offs reflect the positioning: it is not designed for direct SMB use; card-control depth at the application layer is less than dedicated platforms like Ramp; and pure card-issuing-feature depth versus Marqeta is lower. SMB buyers shortlisting "Stripe corporate cards" against Ramp/Brex are usually misreading the category, the right comparison is whether to build a card program with Stripe Issuing or buy a finished product like Ramp.

    Pricing
    ◐ Partial
    Vendor trust
    8.3/10
    Best fit
    10–10,000+
    Reviews analyzed
    320
    Interested in Stripe Issuing?
  5. #5

    Navan Liquid

    G2 4.7 (5,840)

    T&E corporate card built around travel booking.

    Navan Liquid (formerly TripActions Liquid) is the corporate card component of the Navan travel-and-expense platform, founded 2015, last priced at $9.2B in 2022 (subsequent valuation reset signals have been reported in 2023-2024 but not publicly confirmed by Navan). The card is built around travel: when travel booking happens inside Navan, the resulting card swipes are auto-matched to the trip, GL-coded by destination and category, and policy-enforced against the travel rules. The strengths sit precisely in the travel-heavy use case: deepest travel-booking integration of any card product, multi-currency native, mature global operations across US/EU/UK/AU, and the only credible cloud-native replacement for SAP Concur Travel + Expense at the mid-market end. The trade-offs follow from the positioning: outside the travel-heavy use case the card-only proposition is less competitive than Ramp/Brex; pricing is opaque and per-traveller; the February 2023 TripActions-to-Navan rebrand created multi-year user confusion that has only partially decayed in reviews.

    Pricing
    ○ Quote-only
    Vendor trust
    7.3/10
    Best fit
    50–5,000
    Reviews analyzed
    5,840
    Interested in Navan Liquid?
  6. #6

    Bento for Business

    G2 4.3 (280)

    Physical and virtual cards with hard limits for very small businesses.

    Bento for Business is the small-business-focused corporate card platform, founded 2013. The product is a Mastercard-issued debit card (via Sutton Bank historically) with hard per-card spend limits, virtual card support, and basic expense controls. Bento sits in the segment Ramp and Brex have largely exited or never targeted, the very small business (under 25 employees), family-run companies, and field-service firms where the buyer wants tight per-card limits without a credit underwriting cycle or interchange-funded free-tier complexity. Strengths: simple per-card pricing model, hard spend limits that work for cash-conscious owners, no credit check (prepaid model), and Mastercard acceptance. Trade-offs: feature depth is materially thinner than modern peers; no cashback at the level Ramp/Brex offer; integration ecosystem is narrow; and the product velocity has been slow, which suits the conservative target segment but flags the platform as a long-term plateau.

    Pricing
    ● Transparent
    Vendor trust
    7.8/10
    Best fit
    1–25
    Reviews analyzed
    280
    Interested in Bento for Business?
  7. #7

    BILL Spend & Expense (Divvy)

    G2 4.5 (1,240)

    Divvy cards bundled into BILL's AP-anchored platform after the 2021 acquisition.

    Divvy was acquired by BILL.com in May 2021 for approximately $2.5B and has since been integrated and rebranded as BILL Spend & Expense. The product is a credit-line corporate card with software-led controls, now bundled with BILL's AP automation in a single platform aimed at SMB-to-mid-market finance teams. Strengths: meaningful mid-market reach via the BILL distribution channel; combined cards + AP in one workflow for buyers who want both; established credit-line model (charge or revolving). Trade-offs are real and increasingly cited in reviews: the post-2021 BILL integration push has merged Divvy's native UX into BILL's workflow, with multiple G2 reviews from 2024 noting feature loss and SMB-segment churn; product velocity on the card module specifically has slowed post-acquisition; and the BILL parent-company stock has been under pressure since 2023, which has filtered into customer perception of long-term commitment to the card product.

    Pricing
    ◐ Partial
    Vendor trust
    6.8/10
    Best fit
    25–500
    Reviews analyzed
    1,240
    Interested in BILL Spend & Expense (Divvy)?
  8. #8

    Airbase

    G2 4.7 (1,280)

    Corporate cards bundled with spend platform, now inside Paylocity.

    Airbase is the spend platform that includes corporate cards alongside AP and procurement, founded 2017. Acquired by Paylocity in October 2024 for approximately $325M, the platform is now part of Paylocity's broader HR-and-finance bundle. The card itself sits on top of an AP-led spend platform designed by accountants for accountants, with the deepest approval-workflow controls of any product on this list. Strengths: cards integrated with AP, procurement, and audit-grade controls; mature multi-entity architecture; finance-team-favoured workflow. Trade-offs are increasingly central: the post-Paylocity acquisition direction is still being defined; integration into the Paylocity sales motion will likely shift the buyer profile toward existing Paylocity HR customers; and the card module specifically has always been a complement to the AP-led platform rather than a standalone card product, which means card-velocity features lag Ramp/Brex.

    Pricing
    ○ Quote-only
    Vendor trust
    6.8/10
    Best fit
    100–2,000
    Reviews analyzed
    1,280
    Interested in Airbase?
  9. #9

    Pleo

    G2 4.6 (880)

    Copenhagen-built SMB corporate card with FCA UK e-money license.

    Pleo is the Danish-built corporate card platform for European SMBs, founded 2015 in Copenhagen. Last priced at $4.7B in the December 2021 Series C, the company has since experienced the broader European fintech valuation reset (multiple credible reports of secondary-market markdowns through 2022-2024; Pleo has not publicly confirmed a revised primary valuation). The card itself is a Mastercard debit issued under FCA UK e-money authorisation for the UK market and equivalent EU EMI licences elsewhere, with per-card spend limits, receipt capture, and clean per-employee pricing. Strengths: the cleanest SMB UX in the EU card category, FCA-authorised UK presence (~5,000+ UK customers per Pleo public-facing material), GDPR-native, and transparent per-employee published pricing. Trade-offs: feature depth is thinner than Ramp/Brex/Spendesk; less penetration outside Europe; product velocity has slowed in 2024-2025 versus Ramp; and the post-2021 valuation reset is reflected in the vendor-trust scoring even though product execution remains steady.

    Pricing
    ● Transparent
    Vendor trust
    8.0/10
    Best fit
    10–200
    Reviews analyzed
    880
    Interested in Pleo?
  10. #10

    Spendesk

    G2 4.7 (580)

    French-built corporate card with ACPR EMI; neobank license pending.

    Spendesk is the Paris-built corporate card and spend platform, founded 2016. Spendesk operates as an ACPR-authorised EMI in France (Autorité de contrôle prudentiel et de résolution) with public communication about pursuing a neobank licence to operate its own banking infrastructure rather than relying on partner-bank arrangements (status as of mid-2026 remains pending). The card itself is a Mastercard issued under Spendesk's EMI authorisation, with multi-currency support, multi-entity architecture, and native French expert-comptable integration. Strengths: ACPR-authorised, GDPR-native, mature multi-entity for European mid-market, and the deepest French expert-comptable integration in the category. Trade-offs: pricing is opaque (quote-based); less penetration in the US; product velocity slower than Ramp; the neobank license is pending rather than granted, which means the partner-bank dependency remains in place.

    Pricing
    ○ Quote-only
    Vendor trust
    7.7/10
    Best fit
    50–500
    Reviews analyzed
    580
    Interested in Spendesk?

How we rank corporate card software

Evaluated 16 corporate card platforms against six weighted dimensions: card-program economics including cashback, FX markup, and interchange share (25%); card controls and real-time policy enforcement (20%); accounting and ERP integration depth (15%); international and multi-currency support (15%); vendor trust including post-acquisition behaviour and partner-bank stability (15%); and value at the published baseline tier (10%). Pricing data sourced from vendor sites February-April 2026; FX markups and hidden fees only included when disclosed on a vendor pricing page or terms-of-service document, otherwise marked "varies by program" or "industry-reported range". Verified pricing crowdsourced from approximately 900 buyer disclosures. Review-pattern signal pulled from G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, Reddit and CFO community threads; only patterns at 15%+ prevalence survive editorial review. Vendor trust events drawn from primary reporting (mainstream press, vendor blog posts, regulatory filings) and weighted toward incidents that buyers report affecting renewal decisions, including the 2022 Brex SMB exit, the 2021 BILL acquisition of Divvy, the October 2024 Paylocity acquisition of Airbase, the 2024 Brex AI-product reset, and the 2022-2023 partner-bank turbulence in the BaaS layer. Excluded: pure expense-only reimbursement tools (covered separately), pure AP-only platforms (covered separately), and consumer credit cards.

See full deep-dive →
What you get on this category
  • 10 products with full intelligence profile
  • Verified pricing crowdsourced from real buyers
  • Vendor trust scores independent of product quality
  • review patterns from G2, Capterra, Reddit, Trustpilot
  • Quarterly re-verification of all data