Skip to content
Z Zendikt
Australia edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-24

Top 10 ERP Software in Australia for 2026

Independent Australia ERP ranking, AUD pricing, TechnologyOne (Brisbane) local champion reality, ASX-listed buyer patterns, and AASB IFRS fit.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

Australian ERP buying is shaped by three forces: ASX-listed AASB IFRS reporting requirements, GST compliance with ATO tax-invoice rules, and a strong Australian-built champion (TechnologyOne, ASX:TNE, Brisbane) that holds dominant share in Australian higher education, local government, and asset-intensive industries. SAP S/4HANA dominates large enterprise (BHP, Rio Tinto, Telstra). Oracle ERP Cloud has CBA and large bank installs. NetSuite is the mid-market Australian default for 100-1,000 employee firms. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations holds mid-market manufacturing and retail. MYOB Acumatica covers Australian SMB ERP.

Picks for Australia

  • Large Australian enterprise in resources, manufacturing, or telecom (5,000+ employees): sap-s4hana BHP, Rio Tinto, Fortescue, Telstra-tier. SAP is the default Australian enterprise ERP. Strong Australian SAP partner ecosystem (Deloitte, Accenture, IBM Australia). AASB IFRS, GST, FBT, payroll tax handled.
  • Australian bank or financial services (CBA, Westpac, ANZ, NAB-tier): oracle-erp CBA runs Oracle ERP. Strong Australian banking and large financial services adoption. APRA reporting compatibility and IFRS 9/15/16 depth.
  • Australian mid-market and ASX 200 finance + HCM unified (1,000-5,000 employees): workday-financials-erp Workday Financials + Workday HCM unified. Strong in Australian professional services, higher education adjacent to TechnologyOne, and mid-large enterprise wanting single Workday stack.
  • Australian mid-market SaaS, agency, services firm (100-1,000 employees): netsuite-erp Default Australian mid-market cloud ERP. Strong Australian NetSuite partner ecosystem. Native AUD, GST, BAS reporting, AASB IFRS. Used by Atlassian (historically), Canva (mid-stage), most ASX-listed SaaS.
  • Australian manufacturing or distribution mid-market: microsoft-dynamics-365-fno D365 F&O is strong in Australian manufacturing and distribution. Microsoft Australia East datacentre. Tight Office 365 + Power BI integration.
  • Australian SMB or growing mid-market (25-200 employees): acumatica-erp MYOB Acumatica is the Australianised Acumatica variant via MYOB partnership. Native AUD, GST, BAS, payroll tax, AASB SMB. Strong Australian channel and lower TCO than NetSuite at SMB.
Market context

How the enterprise erp market looks in Australia

Australia's ERP market is shaped by a uniquely strong local champion: TechnologyOne (ASX:TNE), Brisbane-founded, with ~AUD 470M+ revenue and dominant share in Australian higher education (most Group of Eight universities run TechnologyOne), Australian local government, and asset-intensive enterprises. TechnologyOne is excluded from our global top 10 by design (it is APAC-focused), so we feature it as the local champion. Australian higher education, local council, and public-sector ERP buying defaults to TechnologyOne first.

For large enterprise in resources, manufacturing, and telecom (BHP, Rio Tinto, Fortescue, Telstra, Optus), SAP S/4HANA is the default with deep Australian partner ecosystem (Deloitte, Accenture, IBM Australia, DXC). Oracle ERP Cloud holds CBA and large financial services. Workday Financials is gaining share in Australian professional services and ASX 200 wanting unified Finance + HCM. NetSuite dominates Australian mid-market cloud ERP (100-1,000 employees) with strong partner channel (Bluefrog, Annexa, JCurve).

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations holds Australian mid-market manufacturing and retail with Microsoft Australia East datacentre. MYOB Acumatica is the Australianised Acumatica covering SMB ERP. SYSPRO and Epicor hold pockets of Australian manufacturing. Compliance hooks: AASB IFRS (Australian Accounting Standards Board), GST tax-invoice rules, BAS quarterly lodgement, FBT (Fringe Benefits Tax) March-year-end reporting, payroll tax (state-based with state thresholds), and ASX continuous disclosure for listed entities. APRA CPS 234 information security requirements apply for APRA-regulated entities (banks, insurers, super funds).

Compliance & local rules

AASB (Australian Accounting Standards Board) standards are IFRS-aligned; AASB 15 revenue, AASB 16 leases, AASB 9 financial instruments are the dominant ERP impacts. ASX-listed entities have continuous disclosure obligations under ASX Listing Rule 3.1; ERP-driven financial close timelines feed half-year and full-year reporting. GST is 10% with ATO tax-invoice rules (specific format, ABN inclusion, GST inclusive vs exclusive presentation); ERP must generate compliant tax invoices and recipient-created tax invoices where applicable. BAS (Business Activity Statement) is lodged monthly or quarterly to the ATO covering GST, PAYG withholding, PAYG instalments, FBT instalments. FBT (Fringe Benefits Tax) year runs 1 April-31 March; ERP must track benefits. Payroll tax is state-based with state thresholds (NSW A$1.2M, Vic A$900K, Qld A$1.3M) and rates 4.85-6.85%. Single Touch Payroll Phase 2 reporting via payroll engine. APRA CPS 234 information security requirements for APRA-regulated entities; CPS 230 operational risk management from July 2025. SOCI Act 2018 critical infrastructure obligations for relevant sectors. Modern Slavery Act 2018 supply-chain disclosure for A$100M+ entities. Privacy Act 1988 and APP; OAIC enforcement; Notifiable Data Breaches scheme. Data residency: SAP, Oracle, Microsoft, Workday, NetSuite all offer Australia East / Sydney + Melbourne regions.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 SAP S/4HANA Enterprise
Tier-1 enterprises, multi-region
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in EU, US, APAC, LatAm; enterprise-grade
2 Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP
Tier-1 enterprises, Oracle-anchored
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; enterprise-grade
3 Workday Financials (Enterprise)
HR-anchored enterprise, Workday HCM customers
Quote - 4.1 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU; enterprise-grade
4 Oracle NetSuite (Enterprise)
Upper-mid-enterprise multi-entity
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU, Canada
5 Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations
Microsoft-anchored enterprise
$210 $210 3.9 Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; worldwide enterprise
6 Infor CloudSuite
Vertical-anchored enterprise
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; vertical-anchored
7 Epicor
Manufacturing and distribution mid-to-upper-mid
Quote - 3.8 Global; strongest in US, UK, AU; vertical-anchored
8 Acumatica (Enterprise)
Upper-mid-enterprise non-manufacturing
Quote - 4.5 Global; strongest in US, growing internationally
9 Sage X3
European mid-market+ manufacturing/distribution
Quote - 3.9 Global; strongest in UK, France, Spain, Germany; growing in US
10 SYSPRO
Mid-market discrete manufacturing
Quote - 4.1 Global; strongest in South Africa, UK, AU, US manufacturing

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Australia actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in AUD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (AUD) Sample Notes
Oracle NetSuite (Enterprise) 50-100 employees A$156,000 87 A$2,500-A$3,500/full-user/month + A$500-A$800/employee + AU implementation; AUD via Oracle NetSuite Australia
Oracle NetSuite (Enterprise) 100-500 employees A$468,000 64 AUD via NetSuite Australia + partner implementation
SAP S/4HANA Enterprise 1,000-5,000 employees A$2,400,000 18 SAP S/4HANA Cloud public + AU implementation by Deloitte/Accenture; AUD
Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP 1,000-5,000 employees A$1,860,000 14 Oracle ERP Cloud + AU implementation; AUD
Workday Financials (Enterprise) 1,000-5,000 employees A$1,440,000 11 Workday Financials + HCM bundle; AUD via Workday Australia
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations 500-2,000 employees A$540,000 22 D365 F&O + AU implementation; AUD
Acumatica (Enterprise) 25-100 employees A$96,000 41 MYOB Acumatica + AU partner; AUD
Epicor 100-500 employees A$312,000 14 Epicor Kinetic; AUD via AU partner
Local challengers

Australia-built or Australia-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Australia buyers and worth a shortlist.

TechnologyOne (ASX:TNE)

Visit ↗

Brisbane-built. The dominant Australian-built ERP and the local champion. Strong in Australian higher education (Group of Eight universities), local government, asset-intensive industries. ASX 100-listed. Native AUD, GST, BAS, FBT, AASB IFRS, payroll tax, ASX disclosure, APRA where applicable. Best for Australian higher education, local council, public sector, and asset-intensive mid-large enterprise.

MYOB Acumatica

Visit ↗

MYOB-distributed Acumatica variant for Australian SMB and mid-market. Native AUD, GST, BAS, payroll tax, AASB SMB. Strong Australian channel (BDO, MYOB partner network). Best Australian SMB ERP under 200 employees.

Pronto Xi

Visit ↗

Melbourne-built Australian ERP (founded 1976). Strong in Australian manufacturing, distribution, retail with 1,500+ customers. Long Australian heritage, deep ATO and ASX compliance defaults.

Greentree (MYOB-owned, now sunsetting)

Visit ↗

New Zealand-built, MYOB-owned. Historical Australian and NZ mid-market ERP; migration path to MYOB Acumatica is now standard.

Excluded for Australia

Global picks that don't fit here

  • SYSPRO
    SYSPRO has Australian presence but is narrow to manufacturing. Australian manufacturers should evaluate Epicor, D365 F&O, or Pronto Xi alongside.
  • Sage X3
    Sage X3 has limited Australian footprint. MYOB Acumatica, NetSuite, or D365 F&O are stronger Australian mid-market choices.
The Australia ranking

All 10, ranked for Australia

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Australia market.

#1

SAP S/4HANA Enterprise

Tier-1 enterprise ERP market leader; the destination for ECC migrators on 2027 deadline.

Founded 1972 · Walldorf, Germany · public · 5,000–500,000+ employees
G2 4.0 (1,480)
Capterra 4.3
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit SAP S/4HANA Enterprise

SAP S/4HANA is the Tier-1 enterprise ERP market leader, the successor to SAP ECC (Enterprise Central Component). Released 2015, SAP S/4HANA runs on the in-memory HANA database and covers full-suite financials + supply chain + manufacturing + procurement + sales + HCM (via SuccessFactors). The product is sold in three editions: S/4HANA Cloud Public Edition (multi-tenant, mid-market focused, covered in our mid-market ranking), S/4HANA Cloud Private Edition (single-tenant cloud), and S/4HANA on-premise. The RISE with SAP program bundles S/4HANA Private Edition + Business Technology Platform (BTP) + AI services + migration tooling. Strengths: largest enterprise ERP installed base globally, deepest process-manufacturing and discrete-manufacturing functional depth, strongest at multi-entity Tier-1 financial consolidation, mature integration to SAP supply-chain (Ariba, IBP, TM), and SAP Joule generative-AI agents launched 2024-2025. Best fit for Tier-1 enterprises ($1B+ revenue) anchored on SAP, particularly process manufacturing, automotive, chemicals, energy, pharma. Trade-offs: SAP's 2027 ECC end-of-mainstream-maintenance deadline is creating a forced migration cycle with widely reported cost overruns (typical 24-48 month migrations costing $20M-$200M+), RISE pricing complexity is the dominant complaint (bundled but opaque, with significant per-FUE, Full Use Equivalent, variance), implementation services dominate TCO (SAP, Accenture, Deloitte, IBM partners), and UX dated relative to cloud-native challengers despite Fiori improvements.

Best for

Tier-1 enterprises ($1B-$50B+ revenue, 5,000-500,000+ employees) anchored on SAP, particularly process manufacturing, automotive, chemicals, energy, pharma, and existing SAP ECC customers facing the 2027 mainstream-maintenance deadline.

Worst for

Mid-market buyers (S/4HANA Cloud Public or NetSuite/Intacct better fit), services-anchored businesses (Workday Financials or Sage Intacct better), greenfield non-SAP enterprises wanting modern UX (Oracle Fusion or Workday cleaner), or buyers prioritizing transparent pricing.

Strengths

  • Largest enterprise ERP installed base globally
  • Deepest process- and discrete-manufacturing functional depth
  • Strongest at Tier-1 multi-entity financial consolidation
  • Mature SAP supply-chain integration (Ariba, IBP, TM)
  • SAP Joule generative-AI agents launched 2024-2025
  • In-memory HANA database performance
  • Public SAP parent stability (DAX:SAP)
  • RISE bundles S/4HANA + BTP + AI + migration

Weaknesses

  • SAP 2027 ECC deadline driving forced migration
  • RISE pricing complexity is the dominant complaint
  • Migration cost overruns widely reported ($20M-$200M+)
  • Implementation services dominate TCO
  • UX dated relative to cloud-native challengers
  • Per-FUE pricing creates surprise costs at scale
  • Customization migration from ECC painful (clean-core principle)

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • S/4HANA Cloud Private Edition (RISE)
    ~$500K-$3M/year typical entry; per-FUE pricing
    Quote
  • S/4HANA Enterprise (Tier-1)
    $3M-$25M+/year for $1B-$10B enterprises
    Quote
  • S/4HANA Tier-1 Global
    $25M-$100M+/year for $10B+ multi-region enterprises
    Quote
  • S/4HANA on-premise (legacy)
    Perpetual license + 22% annual maintenance
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Migration services ($20M-$200M+ for ECC migration)
  • · Per-FUE scaling at user/transaction growth
  • · BTP platform fees for extensions
  • · Annual price increases reported at 7-9%
  • · SI partner premium (Accenture, Deloitte, IBM markups)
  • · Industry-cloud add-ons priced separately

Key features

  • +Full-suite financials (GL, AR, AP, Treasury)
  • +Multi-entity Tier-1 consolidation
  • +Process and discrete manufacturing
  • +Supply chain (Ariba, IBP, TM, EWM)
  • +Procurement (Ariba native)
  • +HCM via SuccessFactors integration
  • +SAP Joule generative-AI agents
  • +In-memory HANA database
  • +Fiori UX layer
  • +1,500+ partner integrations
1500+ integrations
SAP AribaSAP SuccessFactorsSAP ConcurSAP IBPMicrosoft 365SalesforceSnowflakeWorkday HCM (where dual)
Geography
Global; strongest in EU, US, APAC, LatAm; enterprise-grade
#2

Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP

Strongest non-SAP enterprise cloud ERP; Oracle-anchored shops with autonomous database integration.

Founded 1977 · Austin, TX · public · 1,000–200,000+ employees
G2 4.0 (1,280)
Capterra 4.2
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP

Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP is Oracle's flagship enterprise cloud ERP, released 2011 and substantially rebuilt 2018-2024. The product covers full-suite financials + procurement + project management + supply chain + risk management + EPM (enterprise performance management). It is the cloud successor to Oracle E-Business Suite, JD Edwards, and PeopleSoft Financials, and runs on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) with native Oracle Autonomous Database integration. Strengths: strongest non-SAP enterprise cloud ERP by feature depth and AI integration, native Oracle Autonomous Database (self-tuning, self-securing, meaningful at enterprise scale), aggressive AI feature velocity (Oracle AI agents announced at CloudWorld 2024-2025 across AP, expense, supplier management), strong fit for Oracle Database / Exadata-anchored enterprises, and quarterly cloud release cadence (vs SAP's slower release cycle). Best fit for Tier-1 enterprises ($1B+ revenue) wanting non-SAP cloud ERP with Oracle Database alignment. Trade-offs: Oracle's aggressive sales tactics are widely reported (audit-driven license expansion, perpetual-to-cloud conversion pressure on E-Business Suite customers), pricing opaque (typical $1M-$25M+/year), Support depends on tier post-acquisitions, and innovation pace below cloud-native peers (Workday, NetSuite) on UX modernization.

Best for

Tier-1 enterprises ($1B-$25B+ revenue, 5,000-200,000+ employees) anchored on Oracle Database / Exadata wanting non-SAP cloud ERP, particularly financial services, telecom, retail, and pharma.

Worst for

SMB / mid-market (NetSuite or Intacct better fit), Oracle-skeptical buyers (SAP/Workday better), services-anchored at mid-market scope (Sage Intacct cleaner), or buyers prioritizing transparent / fair sales relationships.

Strengths

  • Strongest non-SAP enterprise cloud ERP
  • Native Oracle Autonomous Database integration
  • Aggressive AI feature velocity (Oracle AI agents)
  • Best for Oracle Database / Exadata shops
  • Quarterly cloud release cadence
  • Mature integration to Oracle SCM Cloud, HCM Cloud, EPM
  • Public Oracle parent stability (NYSE:ORCL)
  • Government / FedRAMP authorized

Weaknesses

  • Aggressive Oracle sales tactics widely reported
  • Audit-driven license expansion pressure
  • Pricing opaque ($1M-$25M+/year)
  • Support inconsistency reported
  • Innovation pace below Workday/NetSuite on UX
  • Implementation 12-32 months typical
  • EBS-to-Fusion migration painful

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Fusion Cloud ERP (Standard)
    ~$500K-$2M/year typical entry
    Quote
  • Fusion Cloud ERP (Enterprise)
    $2M-$10M/year for $1B-$5B enterprises
    Quote
  • Fusion Cloud ERP + SCM + HCM Suite
    $10M-$30M+/year for full Oracle Suite enterprises
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services ($1M-$30M+, Oracle Consulting / SI partners)
  • · OCI infrastructure costs
  • · Per-module add-ons (Risk, EPM, Tax)
  • · Annual price increases of 6-9%
  • · Audit-driven license expansion pressure

Key features

  • +Full-suite financials (GL, AP, AR, Treasury)
  • +Procurement Cloud (Oracle native)
  • +Project management
  • +Supply chain (SCM Cloud)
  • +Risk Management Cloud
  • +EPM Cloud (FP&A + consolidation)
  • +Oracle AI agents (AP, expense, supplier)
  • +Native Oracle Autonomous Database
  • +800+ integrations
800+ integrations
Oracle HCM CloudOracle SCM CloudOracle EPM CloudSalesforceWorkday HCM (where dual)Microsoft 365SnowflakeServiceNow
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; enterprise-grade
#3

Workday Financials (Enterprise)

HR-anchored cross-sell; Workday HCM customers extending into enterprise financials.

Founded 2005 · Pleasanton, CA · public · 5,000–200,000+ employees
G2 4.1 (1,180)
Capterra 4.2
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Workday Financials (Enterprise)

Workday Financial Management at enterprise scope is Workday's cloud financial-management platform, sold alongside Workday HCM (covered separately in our HRIS ranking). At Tier-1 enterprise scope, Workday Financials covers core financials + multi-entity consolidation + multi-currency + revenue recognition + procurement + Workday Adaptive Planning (FP&A). The 2024-2026 strategy has been deepening enterprise financial-reporting depth (historically Workday's relative weakness vs SAP/Oracle) and adding industry-specific accelerators. Strengths: native Workday HCM integration (single source of truth across HR + finance), strongest fit for HR-anchored enterprises (5,000-200,000+ employees) already on Workday HCM, modern UX (still the cleanest among Tier-1 ERP options), mature multi-entity, and Workday Illuminate AI strategy launched 2024-2025. Best fit for Workday HCM customers extending into financials at enterprise scope. Trade-offs: outside Workday HCM ecosystem the financials product is significantly less compelling (no greenfield financials wins versus SAP/Oracle), implementation cost meaningful ($500K-$5M+/year ARR plus $1M-$10M implementation), and financial-reporting depth still trails SAP S/4HANA and Oracle Fusion at Tier-1 multi-region complexity.

Best for

Workday HCM enterprise customers (5,000-200,000+ employees) wanting unified HR + financials with native integration. Particularly strong fit for services-anchored enterprises (financial services, professional services, healthcare, higher-ed) where HCM is the primary system.

Worst for

Manufacturing-heavy enterprises (SAP S/4HANA or Oracle better), non-Workday-HCM shops (no greenfield case), procurement-heavy enterprises (Oracle Procurement or SAP Ariba better), or buyers wanting transparent fixed-price implementation.

Strengths

  • Native Workday HCM integration (single source of truth)
  • Cleanest UX among Tier-1 ERP options
  • Right call for HR-anchored enterprises
  • Workday Illuminate AI strategy launched 2024-2025
  • Mature multi-entity consolidation
  • Workday Adaptive Planning (FP&A) bundled
  • Quarterly cloud release cadence
  • Public Workday parent stability

Weaknesses

  • Outside Workday HCM ecosystem significantly less compelling
  • No greenfield financials wins vs SAP/Oracle
  • Implementation cost meaningful ($500K-$5M+/year)
  • Financial-reporting depth trails SAP/Oracle at Tier-1
  • Implementation 12-32 weeks typical
  • Procurement depth below Oracle/SAP
  • Support is hit-or-miss

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Workday Financial Management (Enterprise)
    ~$500K-$2M/year for 5,000-25,000 employee enterprises
    Quote
  • Workday Financial Management Tier-1
    $2M-$8M/year for 25,000-100,000 employee enterprises
    Quote
  • Workday Suite (Financials + HCM + Adaptive)
    Bundled pricing typical $5M-$25M/year for global enterprises
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services ($1M-$10M+ via Deloitte, Accenture, Workday Consulting)
  • · Workday platform license required
  • · Annual price increases of 6-9%
  • · Industry-specific accelerator add-ons

Key features

  • +Core financials (GL, AR, AP, Treasury)
  • +Multi-entity consolidation
  • +Multi-currency
  • +Revenue recognition (ASC 606)
  • +Procurement
  • +Native Workday HCM integration
  • +Workday Adaptive Planning (FP&A)
  • +Workday Illuminate AI
  • +300+ integrations
300+ integrations
Workday HCMWorkday RecruitingWorkday Adaptive PlanningSalesforceMicrosoft 365SnowflakeTableauServiceNow
Geography
Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU; enterprise-grade
#4

Oracle NetSuite (Enterprise)

Upper-mid-enterprise multi-entity cloud ERP; NetSuite OneWorld at Tier-2 scope.

Founded 1998 · Austin, TX · public · 200–5,000 employees
G2 4.0 (3,640)
Capterra 4.1
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Oracle NetSuite (Enterprise)

Oracle NetSuite at upper-mid-enterprise scope (NetSuite OneWorld + multi-entity + multi-subsidiary edition) is the most-adopted cloud ERP in the upper mid-market and Tier-2 enterprise band ($200M-$2B revenue). Founded 1998, acquired by Oracle in 2016 for $9.3B. The OneWorld edition specifically handles multi-entity consolidation, multi-currency, multi-language, and multi-tax-jurisdiction at upper-mid-enterprise scale. The product covers full-suite financials + revenue recognition + project accounting + inventory + procurement + manufacturing-light + SuiteAnalytics. Strengths: broadest cloud ERP installed base at Tier-2 enterprise scope (40,000+ customers globally), mature OneWorld multi-entity engine, deepest cloud-ERP integration ecosystem (600+ integrations), SuiteCloud platform for customization, and aggressive AI feature velocity since 2024 (NetSuite AI for AP automation, expense, supplier risk). Best fit for upper-mid-enterprise multi-entity organizations ($200M-$2B revenue) wanting proven cloud ERP scale below Tier-1 SAP/Oracle complexity. Trade-offs: pricing has escalated meaningfully post Oracle ownership (8-12% annual increases widely reported), the SuiteSuccess implementation model is widely criticized as inflexible, per-user pricing creates surprise costs at scale, and customer support quality declined post-Oracle acquisition relative to pre-2016 NetSuite-led era.

Best for

Upper-mid-enterprise multi-entity organizations ($200M-$2B revenue, 200-5,000 employees) wanting proven cloud ERP scale with multi-currency, multi-subsidiary consolidation below Tier-1 SAP/Oracle complexity.

Worst for

Tier-1 enterprises ($2B+ revenue with multi-region complexity, Oracle Fusion or SAP S/4HANA better), services-anchored mid-market (Sage Intacct better), Microsoft-anchored buyers (Business Central or D365 F&O better), or manufacturing-heavy buyers (SAP/Infor/Epicor depth meaningfully greater).

Strengths

  • Broadest Tier-2 cloud ERP installed base (40,000+ customers)
  • Mature NetSuite OneWorld multi-entity engine
  • Deepest cloud-ERP integration ecosystem (600+ integrations)
  • SuiteCloud platform for customization
  • NetSuite AI launched 2024-2025 (AP, expense, supplier)
  • Public Oracle parent stability
  • Mature revenue recognition (ASC 606)
  • Works for $200M-$2B revenue enterprises

Weaknesses

  • Pricing escalated meaningfully post Oracle ownership
  • Annual price increases reported at 8-12%
  • SuiteSuccess implementation widely criticized
  • Per-user pricing creates surprise costs at scale
  • Customer support quality declined post-Oracle
  • UX dated relative to Workday
  • Manufacturing depth below SAP/Infor/Epicor

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • NetSuite (Mid-Enterprise)
    ~$200K-$500K/year typical for 200-1,000 employees
    Quote
  • NetSuite OneWorld (Upper-Mid-Enterprise)
    $500K-$1.5M/year for multi-entity at $500M-$2B revenue
    Quote
  • NetSuite Tier-2 Suite
    $1.5M-$3M+/year for full ERP + CRM + e-commerce + WMS
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation fees ($200K-$2M+ via SuiteSuccess or partners)
  • · Per-user scaling adds up fast at enterprise
  • · Per-module add-ons (Manufacturing, WMS, SuiteBilling)
  • · Annual price increases of 8-12%
  • · OneWorld add-on premium

Key features

  • +Full-suite financials (GL, AR, AP, Treasury)
  • +NetSuite OneWorld (multi-entity consolidation)
  • +Multi-currency, multi-language, multi-tax
  • +Revenue recognition (ASC 606)
  • +Project accounting (SuiteProjects)
  • +Inventory and procurement
  • +Manufacturing-light
  • +NetSuite AI for AP/expense/supplier
  • +SuiteCloud customization platform
  • +600+ integrations
600+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotWorkday HCMAvalaraCoupaBill.comShopifySnowflake
Geography
Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU, Canada
#5

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations

Microsoft-anchored enterprise ERP; Power Platform bundling is the real reason it wins.

Founded 2016 · Redmond, WA · public · 1,000–25,000 employees
G2 3.9 (1,180)
Capterra 4.0
From $210 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations

Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance & Operations (D365 F&O, sold as separate "Dynamics 365 Finance" + "Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management" since 2020) is Microsoft's enterprise ERP, descended from Dynamics AX (Axapta). The product covers full-suite financials + supply chain + manufacturing + procurement + project operations at Tier-2 enterprise scope. Distinct from Business Central (Microsoft's mid-market ERP, covered separately). Strengths: native integration with Microsoft 365, Azure, Power Platform, Power BI, Microsoft Fabric, and Dynamics 365 Sales/Customer Service, and Power Platform bundling is the real reason Microsoft wins enterprise ERP versus pure-play SAP/Oracle (most enterprise customers buy D365 F&O as part of a broader Microsoft commercial agreement that includes Power Platform credits). Microsoft Copilot integrated across Finance modules since 2024. Built for Microsoft-anchored enterprises ($500M-$10B revenue) particularly retail, distribution, and discrete manufacturing. FedRAMP authorized. Trade-offs: outside Microsoft ecosystem the product is significantly less compelling, partner-dependent implementation creates highly variable quality (Avanade, KPMG, EY, Microsoft partners), customer reports of UX inconsistency across modules, and process-manufacturing depth below SAP S/4HANA.

Best for

Microsoft 365 / Azure-anchored enterprises ($500M-$10B revenue, 1,000-25,000 employees) wanting native Microsoft integration with Power BI reporting and Power Platform extensibility, particularly retail, distribution, discrete manufacturing.

Worst for

Process-manufacturing or chemicals/pharma (SAP S/4HANA significantly deeper), non-Microsoft shops (Oracle Fusion or SAP better fit), services-anchored at mid-market scope (Sage Intacct better), or buyers wanting the cleanest UX (Workday cleaner).

Strengths

  • Native Microsoft 365 / Power Platform / Power BI integration
  • Power Platform bundling (real reason it wins)
  • Microsoft Copilot integrated across Finance modules
  • Default for Microsoft-anchored enterprises
  • Strong Microsoft partner ecosystem (global)
  • FedRAMP authorized
  • Public Microsoft parent stability
  • Made for retail, distribution, discrete manufacturing

Weaknesses

  • Outside Microsoft ecosystem significantly weaker
  • Partner-dependent implementation quality varies
  • UX inconsistency across modules
  • Process-manufacturing depth below SAP
  • Customer support quality varies by region
  • Innovation pace measured
  • Per-user pricing scales fast at enterprise

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Dynamics 365 Finance
    Per user; financials only
    $210 /mo
  • Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management
    Per user; SCM + manufacturing
    $210 /mo
  • Dynamics 365 F&O Bundle
    Per user; both modules with discount
    $300 /mo
  • Dynamics 365 Project Operations
    Per user; project accounting add-on
    $120 /mo
Watch for
  • · Implementation services via partners ($500K-$10M+ at enterprise)
  • · Microsoft commercial agreement (true-up pricing)
  • · Power Platform credits often bundled separately
  • · Industry-specific accelerator add-ons
  • · Annual price increases

Key features

  • +Full-suite financials
  • +Supply chain management
  • +Discrete manufacturing
  • +Procurement and sourcing
  • +Project operations
  • +Native Microsoft 365 + Power Platform integration
  • +Microsoft Copilot for Finance
  • +Power BI reporting
  • +700+ ISV integrations
700+ integrations
Microsoft 365Power BIPower AutomatePower AppsMicrosoft FabricAzureDynamics 365 SalesMicrosoft Teams
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; worldwide enterprise
#6

Infor CloudSuite

Vertical-specific enterprise ERP; Koch-owned with industry depth horizontal vendors lack.

Founded 2002 · New York, NY · private · 1,000–25,000 employees
G2 4.0 (880)
Capterra 4.1
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Infor CloudSuite

Infor CloudSuite is the vertical-specific enterprise ERP suite, founded 2002 through serial acquisition (consolidated SSA Global, Lawson, Baan, GEAC, and others). Acquired in full by Koch Industries in 2020 (Koch had been majority shareholder since 2017). Infor's strategy is industry-specific CloudSuites built on a common cloud platform (Infor OS): CloudSuite Industrial (manufacturing), CloudSuite Healthcare, CloudSuite Distribution, CloudSuite Fashion, CloudSuite Aerospace & Defense, CloudSuite Hospitality, and others. Strengths: deepest vertical depth among enterprise ERP options (the bet is industry-specific UX, data models, and KPIs versus horizontal SAP/Oracle approach), Koch ownership stable since 2020, Infor OS platform unifies CloudSuites with shared analytics + integration + AI services, mature on-prem heritage migrating to cloud (Lawson healthcare customers, Baan manufacturing customers). Best fit for industry-specific buyers in manufacturing, healthcare, distribution, fashion, aerospace ($500M-$5B revenue) wanting vertical depth horizontal vendors lack. Trade-offs: innovation pace below SAP/Oracle on AI feature velocity (Koch-private structure provides stability but less aggressive R&D), Support depends on tier, post-acquisition consolidation complexity (Lawson + Baan + SSA + GEAC heritage), and outside vertical strengths the horizontal product is meaningfully weaker than SAP/Oracle/NetSuite.

Best for

Industry-specific enterprises ($500M-$5B revenue, 1,000-25,000 employees) in manufacturing, healthcare, distribution, fashion, aerospace, hospitality wanting vertical-anchored ERP with industry-specific data models, KPIs, and workflows.

Worst for

Horizontal cross-industry enterprises (SAP/Oracle better breadth), greenfield non-Infor shops without vertical anchor, services-anchored buyers (Workday/Intacct better), or buyers wanting fastest AI feature velocity (Oracle/SAP/Microsoft cloud-native faster).

Strengths

  • Deepest vertical depth among enterprise ERP
  • Industry-specific CloudSuites (Manufacturing, Healthcare, Distribution, Fashion, Aerospace)
  • Koch Industries ownership stable since 2020
  • Infor OS platform unifies CloudSuites
  • Mature on-prem heritage migrating to cloud
  • Industry-specific data models and KPIs
  • Best for $500M-$5B vertical buyers

Weaknesses

  • Innovation pace below SAP/Oracle on AI
  • Support inconsistency reported
  • Post-acquisition consolidation complexity
  • Outside vertical strengths weaker than horizontal vendors
  • Implementation 12-32 months
  • Smaller global footprint than SAP/Oracle
  • Brand awareness lower than horizontal Tier-1

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Infor CloudSuite (vertical entry)
    ~$300K-$1M/year typical for $500M-$1B verticals
    Quote
  • Infor CloudSuite (Enterprise)
    $1M-$5M/year for $1B-$3B vertical enterprises
    Quote
  • Infor CloudSuite Tier-2 Global
    $5M-$15M+/year for $3B+ multi-region vertical enterprises
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services ($500K-$10M+ via Infor Consulting + partners)
  • · Per-user scaling
  • · Industry-module add-ons
  • · Annual price increases of 6-9%
  • · Migration from on-prem Lawson/Baan

Key features

  • +Industry-specific CloudSuites
  • +Full-suite financials
  • +Vertical-specific manufacturing depth
  • +Healthcare-specific (Lawson heritage)
  • +Distribution-specific
  • +Infor OS platform (analytics + integration + AI)
  • +Industry data models and KPIs
  • +500+ integrations
500+ integrations
SalesforceMicrosoft 365Workday HCM (where dual)SnowflakeTableauADPAWSAzure
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC; vertical-anchored
#7

Epicor

Manufacturing-anchored enterprise ERP; CD&R PE-backed with pricing pressure flagged.

Founded 1972 · Austin, TX · pe backed · 200–3,000 employees
G2 3.8 (780)
Capterra 4.0
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Epicor

Epicor is the manufacturing-anchored enterprise ERP, founded 1972 (originally Platinum Technology). Acquired by Clayton Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) in 2020 in a $4.7B deal. The product line covers Epicor Kinetic (cloud manufacturing ERP, flagship), Epicor Eclipse (electrical/HVAC/plumbing distribution), Epicor Prophet 21 (durable-goods distribution), Epicor BisTrack (building materials), and Epicor LumberTrack. Strengths: deep manufacturing functional depth (discrete manufacturing primarily, with strong shop-floor / MES integration), strong fit for $50M-$1B mid-to-upper-mid manufacturers and distributors, mature on-prem heritage migrating to Kinetic cloud, and aggressive product investment under CD&R ownership 2020-2026. Best fit for discrete manufacturers and durable-goods distributors ($100M-$1B revenue). Trade-offs: CD&R PE pressure on pricing has been flagged by customer base (annual increases of 8-12% reported), Support is hit-or-miss, post-acquisition consolidation complexity (multiple product lines from acquisitions), and outside manufacturing/distribution verticals the product is meaningfully weaker than horizontal vendors.

Best for

Discrete manufacturers and durable-goods distributors ($100M-$1B revenue, 200-3,000 employees) in industrial machinery, electrical, plumbing, building materials, fabricated metals, and aerospace components.

Worst for

Process-manufacturing or chemicals/pharma (SAP S/4HANA significantly deeper), services-anchored businesses (Workday/Intacct better), Microsoft-anchored shops (D365 F&O better fit), or buyers concerned about CD&R PE-driven pricing.

Strengths

  • Deep manufacturing functional depth
  • Right call for discrete manufacturing $100M-$1B
  • Strong shop-floor / MES integration
  • Mature on-prem heritage migrating to Kinetic cloud
  • Aggressive product investment under CD&R 2020-2026
  • Distribution depth (Eclipse, Prophet 21, BisTrack)
  • Industry-specific editions for vertical fit

Weaknesses

  • CD&R PE pressure on pricing flagged
  • Annual increases of 8-12% reported
  • Uneven support quality
  • Post-acquisition consolidation complexity
  • Outside manufacturing/distribution weaker
  • Smaller global footprint than SAP/Oracle
  • Implementation 8-18 months typical

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Epicor Kinetic (Standard)
    ~$150K-$400K/year typical for $50M-$200M manufacturers
    Quote
  • Epicor Kinetic (Enterprise)
    $400K-$1.2M/year for $200M-$1B manufacturers
    Quote
  • Epicor Suite (Kinetic + ECM + AI)
    $1.2M-$3M+/year for full Epicor stack
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services ($300K-$3M+ via Epicor Services + partners)
  • · Per-user scaling
  • · Module add-ons (MES, PLM, CRM)
  • · Annual price increases reported at 8-12% post-CD&R
  • · Migration from on-prem editions

Key features

  • +Discrete manufacturing ERP (Kinetic)
  • +Shop-floor / MES integration
  • +Distribution editions (Eclipse, Prophet 21, BisTrack)
  • +Project management
  • +Inventory and procurement
  • +Industry-specific data models
  • +Epicor Cognitive AI
  • +300+ integrations
300+ integrations
SalesforceMicrosoft 365Power BIAvalaraADPSnowflakeAWS
Geography
Global; strongest in US, UK, AU; vertical-anchored
#8

Acumatica (Enterprise)

Customer-favorite UX, partner-led; non-manufacturing fit at upper-mid-enterprise scope.

Founded 2008 · Bellevue, WA · pe backed · 200–3,000 employees
G2 4.5 (1,280)
Capterra 4.4
Custom quote
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Acumatica (Enterprise)

Acumatica at upper-mid-enterprise scope is the customer-favorite cloud ERP with role-based unlimited-user pricing and partner-led implementation, founded 2008. Acquired by EQT Partners in 2024 (reported $2B+ valuation). The product covers core financials + distribution + manufacturing + construction + project accounting + retail/commerce, distinguished by role-based pricing (no per-user fees, buyer pays for transaction volume / resources rather than seats) and the strongest ISV partner ecosystem among mid-to-upper-mid cloud ERP vendors. Strengths: role-based unlimited-user pricing (genuinely differentiated, most enterprise ERPs charge per-user at scale), strongest ISV partner ecosystem in cloud ERP category (3,000+ partners globally), modern UX (consistently rated highest among enterprise cloud ERP options), strong fit for distribution and construction verticals, mature multi-entity capabilities, and 2024 EQT acquisition expected to fund product investment. Best fit for upper-mid-enterprise distribution, construction, retail/commerce ($100M-$1B revenue) wanting cloud ERP with predictable pricing, but flag for non-manufacturing fit (manufacturing depth below Epicor/SAP/Infor). Trade-offs: post-EQT acquisition direction still unclear (2024 deal, 2025-2026 strategy emerging), Thinner footprint than NetSuite (~10,000 vs 40,000), partner-dependent implementation creates variable quality, and Support inconsistency reported.

Best for

Upper-mid-enterprise distribution, construction, retail/commerce ($100M-$1B revenue, 200-3,000 employees) wanting cloud ERP with role-based unlimited-user pricing and partner-led implementation. Particularly strong fit for non-manufacturing verticals.

Worst for

Manufacturing-heavy enterprises (Epicor/SAP/Infor depth meaningfully greater), services-anchored businesses (Workday/Intacct better), SAP-anchored or Oracle-anchored buyers (no greenfield case), or buyers wanting largest installed base (NetSuite preferred).

Strengths

  • Role-based unlimited-user pricing (genuinely differentiated)
  • Strongest ISV partner ecosystem in cloud ERP
  • Modern UX (consistently highest-rated)
  • Works for distribution and construction
  • Mature multi-entity capabilities
  • 3,000+ partners globally
  • 2024 EQT acquisition expected to fund product investment
  • Industry-specific editions (Construction, Manufacturing, Distribution, Commerce)

Weaknesses

  • Post-EQT acquisition direction unclear
  • Lighter market share than NetSuite (~10,000 vs 40,000)
  • Partner-dependent implementation quality
  • Manufacturing depth below Epicor/SAP/Infor
  • Support response times vary
  • Smaller global footprint than Tier-1
  • Brand awareness lower than NetSuite/SAP

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Acumatica Cloud ERP (Standard)
    ~$50K-$150K/year typical for $50M-$200M
    Quote
  • Acumatica Cloud ERP (Enterprise)
    $150K-$500K/year for $200M-$1B
    Quote
  • Acumatica Cloud ERP (Tier-2)
    $500K-$1.5M/year for upper-mid-enterprise
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation fees via partners ($100K-$1M+)
  • · Resource scaling for higher transaction volumes
  • · Annual price increases reported at 6-9%
  • · Industry-edition add-ons

Key features

  • +Core financials with role-based access
  • +Distribution and manufacturing modules
  • +Construction edition
  • +Multi-entity consolidation
  • +Modern UX
  • +Industry-specific editions
  • +Partner-led implementation
  • +500+ integrations
500+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotAvalaraMicrosoft 365ShopifyPower BIBigCommerceMagento
Geography
Global; strongest in US, growing internationally
#9

Sage X3

Sage-anchored manufacturing/distribution ERP; sunset risk and pivot to Sage Network flagged.

Founded 1979 · Newcastle, UK · public · 100–1,500 employees
G2 3.9 (380)
Capterra 4.0
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Sage X3

Sage X3 (rebranded as "Sage Enterprise Management" briefly 2017-2020 then back to Sage X3) is Sage Group's mid-market+ ERP for manufacturing and distribution, originally developed by French vendor Adonix and acquired by Sage in 2005. The product covers core financials + distribution + manufacturing + project management + service management at $50M-$500M revenue scope. Strengths: deepest mid-market+ ERP heritage in EU/UK/France (Sage Group is FTSE-listed UK vendor with historical strength in European mid-market), strong fit for European multi-entity manufacturing/distribution, mature on-prem + cloud hybrid deployment, public Sage parent stability (LSE:SGE), and competitive pricing relative to NetSuite/Acumatica at equivalent scope. Best fit for European-anchored or Sage-anchored manufacturing and distribution ($50M-$500M revenue). Trade-offs: Sage Group strategic pivot to "Sage Network" (Sage Intacct-anchored cloud accounting platform) has flagged sunset risk for Sage X3, Sage has not publicly committed to a multi-decade Sage X3 roadmap, innovation pace below cloud-native peers, customer reports of UX inconsistency, and outside Sage ecosystem the product is meaningfully less compelling.

Best for

European-anchored or Sage-anchored manufacturing and distribution ($50M-$500M revenue, 100-1,500 employees) wanting mid-market+ ERP with European multi-entity depth at competitive pricing. Particularly strong fit in France, UK, Spain, Germany.

Worst for

Buyers prioritizing 10-year roadmap certainty (Sage X3 future unclear), Tier-1 enterprises (SAP/Oracle better fit), services-anchored mid-market (Sage Intacct preferred, Sage's strategic destination), or US-only buyers (NetSuite/Acumatica better US ecosystem).

Strengths

  • Deepest mid-market+ ERP heritage in EU/UK/France
  • Made for European multi-entity manufacturing/distribution
  • Mature on-prem + cloud hybrid
  • Public Sage parent stability (LSE:SGE)
  • Competitive pricing vs NetSuite/Acumatica
  • Strong Sage partner network in EU
  • Multi-language, multi-currency, multi-tax depth

Weaknesses

  • Sage strategic pivot to Sage Network flags sunset risk
  • Sage has not publicly committed to multi-decade Sage X3 roadmap
  • Innovation pace below cloud-native peers
  • UX inconsistency across modules
  • Outside Sage ecosystem less compelling
  • Smaller global footprint than NetSuite/SAP
  • Support is hit-or-miss

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Sage X3 (Standard)
    ~$60K-$150K/year typical for $50M-$200M
    Quote
  • Sage X3 (Enterprise)
    $150K-$400K/year for $200M-$500M
    Quote
  • Sage X3 (Multi-entity)
    $400K-$1M/year for European multi-entity
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services via Sage partners ($100K-$1M+)
  • · Per-user scaling
  • · Industry-module add-ons
  • · Annual price increases

Key features

  • +Core financials
  • +Distribution and manufacturing
  • +Multi-entity consolidation
  • +European multi-tax / multi-currency
  • +Project management
  • +Service management
  • +On-prem + cloud hybrid
  • +200+ integrations
200+ integrations
Microsoft 365SalesforceSage CRMAvalaraADPPower BI
Geography
Global; strongest in UK, France, Spain, Germany; growing in US
#10

SYSPRO

Manufacturing-niche ERP; private and stable but limited modernization.

Founded 1978 · Johannesburg, South Africa · private · 100–1,500 employees
G2 4.1 (280)
Capterra 4.2
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit SYSPRO

SYSPRO is the manufacturing-niche enterprise ERP, founded 1978 in South Africa with global expansion through US, UK, AU operations. The product is privately held (founder-led for decades, now with continuity ownership). SYSPRO covers core financials + distribution + manufacturing + service management primarily for $50M-$500M discrete manufacturers. Strengths: 40+ year manufacturing-niche track record, private and stable ownership (no PE pressure or public-market quarterly velocity), strong fit for $50M-$500M discrete manufacturers wanting niche depth at modest pricing, mature on-prem heritage with cloud option (SYSPRO Cloud), and competitive pricing relative to Epicor/SAP at equivalent manufacturing scope. Best fit for $50M-$500M discrete manufacturers wanting manufacturing-niche ERP at modest pricing. Trade-offs: limited modernization relative to cloud-native peers (UX dated, AI features arrived later than competitors), smaller global footprint than horizontal Tier-1 vendors, partner-dependent implementation creates variable quality, brand awareness lower outside manufacturing community, and innovation pace measured (private structure provides stability but less aggressive R&D).

Best for

Mid-market discrete manufacturers ($50M-$500M revenue, 100-1,500 employees) wanting manufacturing-niche ERP at modest pricing with private-ownership stability. Particularly strong fit in South Africa, UK, AU, and US manufacturing.

Worst for

Tier-1 enterprises ($1B+ revenue, SAP/Oracle/Infor better depth), services-anchored businesses (Workday/Intacct better fit), buyers prioritizing fastest AI feature velocity, or buyers wanting modern cloud-native UX (Acumatica/NetSuite cleaner).

Strengths

  • 40+ year manufacturing-niche track record
  • Private and stable ownership (no PE pressure)
  • Right call for $50M-$500M discrete manufacturers
  • Mature on-prem heritage with SYSPRO Cloud option
  • Competitive pricing vs Epicor/SAP at manufacturing scope
  • Strong global manufacturing partner network

Weaknesses

  • Limited modernization vs cloud-native peers
  • UX dated
  • AI features arrived later than competitors
  • Smaller global footprint than horizontal Tier-1
  • Partner-dependent implementation
  • Brand awareness lower outside manufacturing
  • Innovation pace measured

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • SYSPRO (Standard)
    ~$30K-$80K/year typical for $50M-$150M
    Quote
  • SYSPRO (Enterprise)
    $80K-$200K/year for $150M-$500M
    Quote
  • SYSPRO (Multi-site)
    $200K-$500K/year for multi-site manufacturing
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services via SYSPRO partners ($75K-$500K)
  • · Per-user scaling
  • · Module add-ons
  • · Annual price increases

Key features

  • +Core financials
  • +Discrete manufacturing depth
  • +Distribution
  • +Service management
  • +Multi-entity
  • +On-prem + SYSPRO Cloud
  • +150+ integrations
150+ integrations
Microsoft 365SalesforcePower BIAvalaraAWS
Geography
Global; strongest in South Africa, UK, AU, US manufacturing

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Why isn't TechnologyOne in the global top 10?
TechnologyOne is APAC-focused (Australia, New Zealand, UK higher education and local government primarily) rather than globally distributed, so it sits outside the global top 10 by design. For Australian higher education, local government, and asset-intensive industries (utilities, water, infrastructure), TechnologyOne is the textbook first evaluation. ASX:TNE has ~470M+ AUD revenue, all Group of Eight universities have used it at some scale, and it is the default for Australian local councils. Australian buyers in those segments should start with TechnologyOne before evaluating SAP, Oracle, or Workday.
NetSuite vs SAP S/4HANA Cloud for a 500-person Australian SaaS company?
NetSuite wins for cloud-native Australian SaaS at this size. Faster implementation (3-6 months vs 12-18 months for S/4HANA), AUD pricing transparency, strong Australian partner ecosystem, and native multi-currency, multi-entity, multi-book that fits Australian SaaS expanding internationally. S/4HANA wins only when you are already in an SAP estate or planning a 5,000+ employee scale in 3-5 years with manufacturing or supply chain complexity. For an Australian 500-person SaaS, NetSuite is almost always the right answer; the typical fully loaded annual is A$400K-A$600K vs S/4HANA at A$1.5M+ all-in.
How does AASB 15 revenue recognition affect ERP selection?
AASB 15 (the Australian equivalent of IFRS 15) requires the five-step revenue recognition model applied to all contracts with customers. For SaaS, professional services, construction, and long-tail subscription businesses, this requires ERP-level performance-obligation tracking, allocation of transaction price across obligations, and progressive revenue recognition. NetSuite has SuiteBilling and Advanced Revenue Management modules for AASB 15. Workday Financials has native AASB 15 revenue recognition. SAP S/4HANA has SAP RAR (Revenue Accounting and Reporting). Oracle ERP Cloud has Revenue Management Cloud. Avoid retrofitting AASB 15 in spreadsheets; the audit trail is fragile and ASIC-listed entities have continuous-disclosure exposure.
Does APRA CPS 234 affect ERP vendor selection?
For APRA-regulated entities (banks, credit unions, super funds, insurers, RSE licensees), CPS 234 requires the regulated entity to maintain information security capability commensurate with the size and extent of the threats. ERP vendors must demonstrate SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, encryption in transit and at rest, robust incident reporting (CPS 234 requires APRA notification within 72 hours of a material incident). From July 2025 CPS 230 adds operational risk management and business continuity requirements including supplier risk assessment. SAP, Oracle, Microsoft, Workday, NetSuite all satisfy CPS 234 and have published shared-responsibility documentation. APRA also requires the regulated entity to test the vendor's controls; pure self-attestation is not sufficient.
SAP S/4HANA vs Oracle ERP, which one for enterprise?
SAP S/4HANA if you have an existing SAP ECC footprint (the 2027 mainstream-maintenance deadline forces this decision), process manufacturing / chemicals / pharma / automotive / energy heritage, or Tier-1 multi-region complexity needing the deepest enterprise functional depth. Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP if you have an Oracle Database / Exadata footprint, want a non-SAP cloud-native architecture, or value Oracle Autonomous Database integration and quarterly cloud release cadence. Most SAP ECC migrators go S/4HANA; most Oracle EBS / PeopleSoft Financials migrators go Fusion. Greenfield enterprises split based on vertical anchor (process-manufacturing → SAP; financial services / telecom → Oracle).
How does enterprise ERP differ from accounting software?
Accounting software (QuickBooks Online, Xero, Sage Intacct) handles GL, AP, AR, financial close at SMB or mid-market scope. Enterprise ERP (this ranking) covers full-suite financials + supply chain + manufacturing + HCM + projects + procurement at Tier-1 enterprise scope. The boundary between mid-market accounting and enterprise ERP runs roughly at $200M-$500M revenue and multi-entity / multi-region complexity. See our Top 10 Mid-Market Accounting & Financial Management Software ranking for sub-$500M-revenue buyers.
What are the implications of the 2027 SAP ECC deadline?
SAP set 2027 as the end of mainstream maintenance for SAP ECC (with limited extended-maintenance scenarios available to 2030 at premium pricing). This forces tens of thousands of SAP ECC customers to either (1) migrate to S/4HANA Cloud or on-prem, (2) replatform to Oracle Fusion / Workday Financials / Microsoft D365 F&O, or (3) pay premium for extended maintenance to 2030. Most SAP customers are migrating to S/4HANA, typical migrations cost $20M-$200M+ and run 24-48 months. The migration cycle is the largest enterprise-software event in 20 years and is driving demand at SI partners (Accenture, Deloitte, IBM, EY, KPMG) and at competitor vendors hunting SAP escapees.
How much should I budget for enterprise ERP?
Upper-mid-enterprise ($200M-$500M revenue, 200-2,000 employees): $300K-$1.5M/year ARR (NetSuite OneWorld, Acumatica Enterprise, Sage X3, Epicor, SYSPRO Multi-site). Tier-2 enterprise ($500M-$2B revenue, 1,000-5,000 employees): $1M-$5M/year ARR (NetSuite Tier-2, Workday Financials, D365 F&O, Infor CloudSuite). Tier-1 enterprise ($2B-$25B revenue, 5,000-50,000 employees): $5M-$25M+/year ARR (SAP S/4HANA, Oracle Fusion, Workday Suite). Tier-1 Global ($25B+ revenue, 50,000+ employees): $25M-$100M+/year ARR. Implementation services typically equal or exceed first-year ARR.
How long does enterprise ERP implementation take?
Acumatica, NetSuite OneWorld: 6-12 months. Sage X3, Epicor Kinetic, SYSPRO: 8-18 months. Microsoft Dynamics 365 F&O: 12-24 months. Infor CloudSuite, Workday Financials: 12-32 months. Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP: 12-32 months. SAP S/4HANA (greenfield or ECC migration): 24-48 months at Tier-1. Plan implementation as a finance + supply-chain + IT transformation, not just software setup. SI partner selection (Accenture, Deloitte, IBM, EY, KPMG, Avanade, Capgemini) is critical, partner quality dominates project outcomes.
What about AI agents in ERP for 2026?
AI agents are the 2025-2026 ERP differentiator. SAP Joule (S/4HANA, SuccessFactors, Ariba) launched 2024-2025, agents for AP automation, expense reconciliation, supplier risk, journal-entry classification. Oracle AI agents (Fusion Cloud ERP) launched at CloudWorld 2024, agents for AP, expense, supplier management, journal entry. Microsoft Copilot for Finance (D365 F&O), Copilot agents across Finance modules since 2024. Workday Illuminate (Workday Financials + HCM) launched 2024-2025. NetSuite AI launched at SuiteWorld 2024. Vendors stuck on form-based workflows without AI activation are losing share. Test agent quality with your real exception scenarios, generic demos misrepresent fit.
Should I run cloud ERP, hybrid, or on-prem in 2026?
Cloud ERP is the default for greenfield enterprise deployments in 2026. SAP S/4HANA Cloud Private Edition (RISE), Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP, Workday Financials, NetSuite, D365 F&O, and Acumatica are all cloud-native or cloud-first. On-prem ERP still represents 40%+ of installed base globally, typically older SAP ECC, Oracle E-Business Suite, JD Edwards, Lawson, Baan, and Sage X3 deployments. Hybrid deployments (SAP S/4HANA on-prem + cloud extensions, Microsoft D365 F&O Tier-2 on-prem option, SYSPRO Cloud) exist but are increasingly the migration step rather than the destination. The 2027 SAP ECC deadline is accelerating cloud transition.
How does enterprise ERP overlap with HCM and procurement?
Enterprise ERP suites typically include or integrate with HCM and procurement modules. SAP S/4HANA + SuccessFactors (HCM) + Ariba (procurement). Oracle Fusion ERP + Oracle HCM Cloud + Oracle Procurement Cloud. Workday Financials + Workday HCM (single platform). Microsoft D365 F&O + D365 Human Resources + procurement modules. Most enterprises run integrated suites where possible. Best-of-breed alternatives: Workday HCM standalone with SAP/Oracle/D365 ERP, Coupa procurement standalone, ServiceNow ITSM/HRSD integrated. See our HRIS / Core HR ranking for HCM-only platforms and our procurement ranking for Coupa / SAP Ariba / Oracle Procurement comparison.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Enterprise ERP ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-24. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.