Germany verdict (TL;DR)
Verified 2026-05-23The German WMS market is the home turf of Korber Supply Chain (Hamburg, parent of Inconso) and SAP (Walldorf, SAP EWM): these two vendors dominate the German Mittelstand and DAX 40 enterprise WMS market in a way the global Top 10 does not fully capture. Korber Supply Chain WMS (through Inconso) and SAP EWM together hold a meaningful majority share of German Mittelstand and Tier-1 manufacturing WMS deployments. Manhattan Active WM and Blue Yonder are present at German Tier-1 retail and 3PL but with smaller share than DACH-region competitors. Microsoft Dynamics 365 SCM Warehouse wins at German Microsoft-anchored mid-market. AEB GmbH (Stuttgart) is the German customs and trade-compliance leader and integrates with most WMS for German export documentation. The German-specific dynamic: cultural preference for proven, conservative WMS vendors (Inconso, SAP, AEB) is stronger than in US or UK markets, and the SAP WM 2025 end-of-life is driving the largest German EWM migration cycle in 20 years.
Picks for Germany
- German DAX 40 and Mittelstand SAP customers: sap-ewm SAP EWM dominates German enterprise WMS. DAX 40 (BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen, BASF, Bayer, Siemens-tier) all run SAP, and SAP EWM is the default WMS. The SAP WM 2025 end-of-life is driving the largest German EWM migration cycle in 20 years.
- German Mittelstand discrete manufacturing and EU 3PL: korber-wms Korber Supply Chain WMS (Hamburg, through Inconso) is the DACH champion for German Mittelstand discrete manufacturing, automotive supply, and European 3PL. German-language support, German SI partner network, Inconso heritage trusted.
- German Tier-1 retail and wholesale: manhattan-active-wm Manhattan Active WM at German Tier-1 retail (Otto Group, Zalando, Metro-tier). Manhattan has a German subsidiary and growing German SI partner ecosystem.
- German Microsoft-anchored mid-market: d365-scm-wms D365 SCM Warehouse at German Microsoft 365 / Azure-anchored mid-market manufacturing and distribution. Strong German Microsoft partner ecosystem (Avanade DACH, KPMG DACH, NTT DATA DACH).
How the warehouse management software (wms) market looks in Germany
The German WMS market must be understood as the meeting point of two dominant DACH-region vendors. Tier 1 (German DAX 40 and Mittelstand): SAP EWM dominates. BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen, BASF, Bayer, Siemens, Bosch, Daimler Truck all run SAP as the system of record and SAP EWM as the WMS execution layer. The German SAP SI ecosystem is the deepest in the world (SAP is Walldorf-headquartered) and includes msg, DSC, NTT DATA, Capgemini DACH, Accenture DACH, and dozens of regional Mittelstand-specialist SI partners.
Tier 2 (German Mittelstand non-SAP and EU 3PL): Korber Supply Chain WMS (Hamburg, through Inconso) is the DACH champion. Inconso (founded 1973) was the German Mittelstand WMS gold standard before Korber acquired it; Korber's portfolio integration is ongoing but the Inconso heritage remains the German trust brand. Voiteq voice-pick depth from the Korber portfolio is widely deployed in German warehouses. AEB GmbH (Stuttgart) is the German customs and trade-compliance leader; it integrates with SAP EWM, Korber, Manhattan, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 for German export documentation, EU customs (AEO authorized economic operator), and sanctions screening.
The 2026 defining German dynamic is the SAP WM 2025 end-of-life driving the largest German EWM migration cycle in 20 years. Tens of thousands of German SAP WM installs must migrate to SAP EWM (or rare cases, to Korber); the migration timeline is 12-24 months at typical Mittelstand scope, longer at DAX 40. SAP and Korber are the two beneficiaries of this migration cycle. Microsoft Dynamics 365 and NetSuite are competing but with much smaller share.
German AEO (Authorized Economic Operator) certification for cross-border movement integrates with WMS via AEB or Atlas customs systems; SAP EWM, Korber, and Manhattan all support German AEO and Atlas integration. German E-Rechnung (electronic invoicing) mandate operative from January 2025 for receiving and January 2027-2028 for sending; SAP S/4HANA EWM, Korber, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 all have German E-Rechnung-ready integration (ZUGFeRD or XRechnung formats). GoBD (German tax-data integrity and immutability) requirements for warehouse-related accounting data; SAP EWM, Korber, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 all GoBD-compliant. EU GDPR (DSGVO) compliance for warehouse-worker data; all Tier-1 WMS GDPR-compliant. German Bundesdatenschutzgesetz (BDSG) additional workplace-data requirements. EU FMD for German pharma serialization (securPharm); SAP EWM, Korber, and Infor support securPharm and EU FMD. German cold-chain regulations for food and pharma; Korber, SAP EWM, and Infor have German cold-chain depth.
Quick comparison, ranked for Germany
| Product | Best for | Starts at | 10-emp/mo* | Pricing | G2 | Geo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM) | SAP-anchored Tier-1 enterprise | Quote | - | 4.1 | Global; strongest in EU, US, APAC, LatAm | |
| 5 Korber Supply Chain WMS | European Mittelstand and Tier-1 | Quote | - | 4.2 | Global; strongest in DACH, EU, US, APAC | |
| 1 Manhattan Active Warehouse Management | Tier-1 retail, wholesale, 3PL | Quote | - | 4.3 | Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU, JP | |
| 2 Blue Yonder Warehouse Management | Tier-1 retail, wholesale, food, 3PL | Quote | - | 4.0 | Global; strongest in US, EU, AU, APAC | |
| 7 Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse | Microsoft-anchored mid-large enterprise | $210 | $210 | 3.9 | Global; strongest in US, EU, APAC | |
| 4 Oracle Warehouse Management Cloud | Oracle-anchored mid-large enterprise, 3PL | Quote | - | 4.1 | Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, APAC | |
| 6 Infor WMS (CloudSuite WMS) | Vertical mid-enterprise (food, pharma, 3PL) | Quote | - | 4.0 | Global; strongest in US, EU, AU | |
| 8 NetSuite WMS | NetSuite-anchored mid-market distributor | Quote | - | 4.0 | Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, AU | |
| 9 Logiwa WMS | DTC ecommerce brands and growing 3PLs | $1500 | $1500 | 4.4 | US, Canada, UK, AU; expanding EU | |
| 10 Fishbowl Warehouse | QuickBooks-anchored SMB | $0 | $0 | 4.1 | US-primary; some Canada and AU |
*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.
What buyers in Germany actually pay
Median annual deal size by employee band, in EUR. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.
| Product | Employee band | Median annual (EUR) | Sample | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM) | German DAX 40 SAP customer | €1,800,000 | 24 | SAP EWM Germany; EUR; excludes RISE bundling |
| SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM) | German Mittelstand SAP customer | €650,000 | 38 | SAP EWM Decentralized Germany; EUR |
| Korber Supply Chain WMS | German Mittelstand manufacturing | €480,000 | 42 | Korber WMS (Inconso) Germany; EUR |
| Manhattan Active Warehouse Management | German Tier-1 retail 1-3 sites | €850,000 | 18 | Manhattan Active WM Germany; EUR |
| Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse | German 500-5,000 employees | €320,000 | 32 | D365 SCM Germany; EUR |
Germany-built or Germany-strong vendors worth knowing
Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Germany buyers and worth a shortlist.
Inconso (Korber Supply Chain)
Visit ↗Bad Nauheim-headquartered, Korber-owned. The German Mittelstand WMS gold standard pre-Korber acquisition. 50+ years of German manufacturing and 3PL WMS heritage. Now within Korber Supply Chain portfolio but Inconso brand and German team remain.
AEB GmbH
Visit ↗Stuttgart-headquartered customs and trade-compliance leader. AEB integrates with SAP EWM, Korber, Manhattan, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 for German Atlas customs, AEO authorized economic operator, sanctions screening, and EU trade documentation. The German trade-compliance default.
PSI Logistics
Visit ↗Berlin-headquartered PSI Software AG subsidiary. German WMS for manufacturing and distribution with deep DACH presence.
TUP
Visit ↗Stutensee-headquartered (Karlsruhe area). TUP.WMS for German Mittelstand and 3PL.
All 10, ranked for Germany
Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Germany market.
SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM)
The default WMS for SAP S/4HANA customers; embedded EWM replacing legacy SAP WM (end-of-life 2025).
SAP Extended Warehouse Management (EWM) is SAP's Tier-1 WMS and the default for SAP S/4HANA customers. EWM ships in two deployment models: Embedded EWM (integrated inside S/4HANA, the strategic direction) and Decentralized EWM (standalone alongside S/4HANA or non-SAP ERP, for high-throughput operations needing separation of warehouse execution from ERP). SAP WM (the legacy module inside SAP ECC) reached end-of-life in 2025 as part of the broader SAP ECC 2027 migration; existing SAP WM customers must migrate to EWM, which is the dominant 2026 SAP-customer evaluation. EWM covers full Tier-1 warehouse execution: receiving, putaway, slot optimization, wave and batch picking, pack and ship, yard management, labor management, and material-flow-system integration. Best fit for SAP S/4HANA customers and existing SAP WM customers migrating off the legacy module. Trade-offs: implementation is SI-partner-dependent and 12-24 months at Tier-1, UX dated relative to cloud-native peers despite Fiori, and EWM is genuinely complex (the depth that suits Tier-1 process manufacturing creates configuration burden at simpler distribution operations).
SAP S/4HANA customers and existing SAP WM customers migrating off the 2025-EOL legacy module; particularly process and discrete manufacturing, automotive, chemicals, pharma where SAP S/4HANA is the system of record.
Non-SAP shops (no greenfield case versus Manhattan, Blue Yonder, Korber), sub-$200M revenue operations (over-configured for the use case), DTC ecommerce fulfillment (Logiwa cleaner), or buyers wanting transparent fixed-price implementation.
Strengths
- Default WMS for SAP S/4HANA customers (native integration)
- Tier-1 functional depth (yard, labor, material-flow-system)
- Embedded EWM in S/4HANA strategic direction
- Strong manufacturing, automotive, chemicals, pharma fit
- Public SAP parent stability (DAX:SAP)
Weaknesses
- Implementation 12-24 months at Tier-1; SI partner cost dominates
- UX dated relative to cloud-native peers despite Fiori improvements
- Configuration burden meaningful at simpler distribution operations
Pricing tiers
opaque- Embedded EWM (inside S/4HANA)Included in S/4HANA Cloud Private and on-prem licensing; per-FUEQuote
- Decentralized EWM (standalone)Separate licensing; typical $400K-$3M/year for Tier-1 throughputQuote
- EWM with Material Flow System (MFS)MFS add-on for conveyor and sortation; priced separatelyQuote
- · Implementation services ($1M-$10M+ via Accenture, Deloitte, IBM, SAP partners)
- · SAP WM-to-EWM migration project for legacy ECC customers
- · Per-FUE scaling at user and transaction growth
- · Material-handling-equipment integration priced separately
Key features
- +Receiving and putaway with HU (Handling Unit) tracking
- +Slot optimization (rules-driven)
- +Wave and batch picking
- +Voice-pick via SAP and partner ITS Mobile
- +Yard management
- +Labor management with engineered standards
- +Material Flow System (MFS) for conveyor and sortation
- +Native S/4HANA integration (Embedded EWM)
Korber Supply Chain WMS
DACH and EU champion; HighJump, Voiteq, Aimtec, Inconso unified into a Tier-1 portfolio.
Korber Supply Chain WMS is the DACH and European Tier-1 WMS portfolio assembled by Korber AG (Hamburg) through a series of acquisitions: HighJump (acquired 2017, US-headquartered SMB-to-mid-enterprise WMS), Voiteq (voice-pick technology), Aimtec (Czech automotive WMS), Inconso (German Mittelstand WMS), Cohesio Group (APAC), and Cirrus Logistics. The unified portfolio covers the full WMS scope from SMB through Tier-1 enterprise, with particularly deep DACH-region (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) and EU presence. Best fit for European discrete manufacturing (automotive, machinery), German Mittelstand distribution, and European 3PLs where local SI partner network and German-language support matter. Strengths: DACH market leadership, deep EU regulatory and language coverage, voice-pick depth from Voiteq, and a portfolio that spans SMB to Tier-1 (HighJump for SMB-mid, Inconso/Voiteq for Tier-1). Trade-offs: portfolio integration is ongoing (HighJump, Inconso, Aimtec remain partially separate product lines), private-equity ownership (Korber AG is privately held) creates pricing and roadmap opacity, and US market presence smaller than Manhattan/Blue Yonder.
European discrete manufacturing (automotive, machinery), German Mittelstand distribution, and European 3PLs (EUR 100M-EUR 5B revenue) wanting local SI partner network, German-language support, and voice-pick depth.
US-only enterprise (Manhattan or Blue Yonder more established), sub-EUR 50M revenue operations (Logiwa or D365 SCM Warehouse better fit), SAP-anchored shops (SAP EWM natural choice), or buyers wanting a single integrated cloud-native product (HighJump/Inconso portfolio split adds complexity).
Strengths
- DACH and EU market leader
- Deep voice-pick technology from Voiteq acquisition
- Portfolio spans SMB (HighJump) to Tier-1 (Inconso)
- Strong European discrete manufacturing and automotive depth
- German-language and EU regulatory coverage
Weaknesses
- Portfolio integration ongoing (HighJump, Inconso, Aimtec partially separate)
- Private Korber AG ownership creates pricing and roadmap opacity
- US market presence smaller than Manhattan/Blue Yonder
Pricing tiers
opaque- HighJump WMS (SMB-Mid)~EUR 100K-EUR 500K/year typical for 1-2 warehousesQuote
- Inconso WMS (Mid-Tier-1)EUR 500K-EUR 3M/year typical for European MittelstandQuote
- Korber Supply Chain SuiteEUR 3M-EUR 10M+/year for multi-site Tier-1 European operationsQuote
- · Implementation services via Korber Professional Services or SI partners
- · Voice-pick hardware (Voiteq Vocollect compatible) priced separately
- · Material-handling-equipment integration priced separately
- · Portfolio split adds implementation coordination cost
Key features
- +Receiving, putaway, slot optimization
- +Wave and batch picking
- +Voice-pick via Voiteq (deep DACH depth)
- +Pack and ship with parcel manifest
- +Yard and dock management
- +Labor management
- +3PL multi-client warehousing
- +European EU regulatory and language coverage
Manhattan Active Warehouse Management
Tier-1 WMS market leader; microservices-native Active platform at large retail, wholesale, and 3PL.
Manhattan Active Warehouse Management is the cloud-native successor to Manhattan WMOS (Warehouse Management for Open Systems), released on the Active platform in 2020 and substantially expanded 2021-2025. The product covers full-suite warehouse execution: directed receiving, putaway, slot optimization, wave and batch picking, pack and ship, parcel manifest, cycle counting, returns, and integrated labor management. The Active platform is microservices-native, evergreen (continuous deployment with no upgrades), and runs on Google Cloud. Manhattan Associates is publicly traded (NASDAQ:MANH) and the most-cited Tier-1 WMS by Gartner Magic Quadrant for Warehouse Management Systems. Best fit for Tier-1 retail, wholesale, and 3PL operations where throughput, order-orchestration, and SLA depth are binding constraints; not the right answer below $200M revenue or sub-50,000 SKU operations.
Tier-1 enterprise retail, wholesale, and 3PL operations ($200M-$50B+ revenue, 100,000+ SKUs, 50,000+ daily orders) where throughput, order-orchestration, and SLA depth are binding constraints and Manhattan Active Omni or Manhattan Active Transportation is already in the stack.
Sub-$200M revenue operations (Logiwa, NetSuite WMS, or D365 SCM Warehouse better fit), QuickBooks-anchored SMB (Fishbowl appropriate), DACH-region enterprises wanting local SI depth (Korber stronger), or buyers wanting transparent fixed-price implementation.
Strengths
- Most-cited Tier-1 WMS by Gartner Magic Quadrant
- Microservices-native Active platform (evergreen, continuous deployment)
- Strongest order-orchestration integration with Manhattan Active Omni
- Deep parcel-manifest and carrier integration (FedEx, UPS, USPS, DHL)
- Mature voice-pick and scanner workflow on Honeywell and Zebra devices
Weaknesses
- Pricing opaque; $1M-$10M+/year typical at enterprise scope
- Implementation 9-18 months at Tier-1 (vendor weeks claims unrealistic)
- Active platform migration from legacy WMOS adds cost and timeline
Pricing tiers
opaque- Manhattan Active WM (Mid-enterprise)~$500K-$1.5M/year typical entry for 1-3 warehouses, mid-throughputQuote
- Manhattan Active WM (Tier-1 enterprise)$1.5M-$5M/year for 5-20 warehouses, high throughputQuote
- Manhattan Active WM + Omni + Transportation Suite$5M-$15M+/year for global multi-site operationsQuote
- · Implementation services ($1M-$10M+ via Manhattan Professional Services, Accenture, Deloitte, Cognizant)
- · Material-handling-equipment integration (conveyor, sortation, robotics) priced separately
- · Voice-pick hardware (Honeywell, Zebra, Vocollect) priced separately
- · Annual price increases reported at 6-8%
Key features
- +Directed receiving and putaway
- +Slot optimization (rules + analytics-driven)
- +Wave, batch, cluster, and zone picking
- +Voice-pick and scan-pick mobile workflows
- +Pack and ship with parcel-manifest integration
- +Integrated labor management and engineered standards
- +Cycle counting and inventory accuracy
- +Active platform microservices and continuous deployment
Blue Yonder Warehouse Management
Tier-1 WMS paired with the Blue Yonder supply-chain suite; Panasonic-owned since 2021.
Blue Yonder Warehouse Management (descended from RedPrairie WMS, JDA Warehouse Management, and the broader JDA Software lineage) is a Tier-1 WMS sold alongside the broader Blue Yonder supply-chain suite covering planning, transportation, fulfillment, and luminate platform analytics. Panasonic Holdings acquired Blue Yonder in 2021 for $7.1B (closed September 2021), and integration with Panasonic Connect and Panasonic gemba-process automation has progressed through 2024-2025. The WMS product is mature at retail, wholesale, food, and 3PL scope, with particular depth in retail distribution and grocery. Strengths: Tier-1 functional depth comparable to Manhattan, paired Blue Yonder planning and transportation suite, and Panasonic Connect material-handling-automation alignment. Trade-offs: cloud migration from on-prem RedPrairie installs is the dominant complaint, post-Panasonic-acquisition integration cadence has been steady but not transformative through 2024, and pricing opaque ($1M-$8M+/year typical).
Tier-1 retail, wholesale, food, and 3PL operations ($500M-$50B revenue, 50,000+ daily orders) already in the Blue Yonder supply-chain suite or wanting paired planning, transportation, and warehouse management on a single vendor.
Sub-$200M revenue operations (Logiwa or D365 SCM Warehouse better fit), SAP-anchored shops where SAP EWM is the natural choice, Oracle-anchored shops (Oracle WMS Cloud cleaner integration), or buyers wanting the modern microservices architecture Manhattan Active offers.
Strengths
- Tier-1 functional depth comparable to Manhattan
- Paired with Blue Yonder supply-chain planning and transportation
- Deep retail-distribution and grocery vertical depth
- Panasonic Connect material-handling-automation alignment
- Strong global presence in retail, food, 3PL
Weaknesses
- Cloud migration from on-prem RedPrairie installs is the dominant complaint
- Post-Panasonic integration cadence steady but not transformative through 2024
- Pricing opaque ($1M-$8M+/year typical)
Pricing tiers
opaque- Blue Yonder Warehouse Management (Mid-enterprise)~$400K-$1.5M/year typical for 1-3 warehousesQuote
- Blue Yonder WM (Tier-1 enterprise)$1.5M-$5M/year for multi-site retail and 3PLQuote
- Blue Yonder Supply Chain Suite$5M-$15M+/year for full planning + WMS + TMSQuote
- · Implementation services ($1M-$8M+ via Blue Yonder Services, Accenture, Deloitte, IBM)
- · Cloud migration from on-prem RedPrairie reported as multi-year project
- · Material-handling-equipment integration priced separately
- · Annual price increases reported at 6-8%
Key features
- +Receiving, putaway, slot optimization
- +Wave, batch, cluster picking
- +Voice-pick and scan-pick workflows
- +Pack, ship, parcel manifest
- +Labor management
- +Integration with Blue Yonder Planning and Transportation
- +Luminate platform analytics
- +Cycle counting
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse
Bundled with D365 Supply Chain Management; Microsoft-anchored enterprises with Power Platform integration.
Microsoft Dynamics 365 Supply Chain Management Warehouse (the warehouse module within D365 SCM, descended from Dynamics AX warehousing) is Microsoft's ERP-bundled WMS. The module covers receiving, putaway, slot optimization, wave and batch picking, pack and ship, cycle counting, and labor through Dynamics 365 Warehouse Management mobile app and integration with parcel carriers. Distinct from D365 Business Central's lighter warehouse module (for SMB) and from third-party WMS integrated with D365 (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, Korber all run alongside D365 at Tier-1). Best fit for Microsoft 365 / Azure-anchored mid-large enterprises ($200M-$2B revenue) where D365 SCM is the ERP and warehouse needs do not exceed mid-enterprise distribution or discrete-manufacturing complexity. Strengths: native Microsoft 365, Power BI, Power Automate, and Power Platform integration; Microsoft Copilot integration since 2024; FedRAMP authorized; Microsoft commercial agreement bundling often makes total cost competitive versus standalone Tier-1 WMS. Trade-offs: functional depth meaningfully lighter than Manhattan, Blue Yonder, or SAP EWM at extreme throughput; partner-dependent implementation creates variable quality; and material-handling-equipment ecosystem less deep than Tier-1 pure-play WMS.
Microsoft 365 / Azure-anchored mid-large enterprises ($200M-$2B revenue, 1,000-15,000 employees) where D365 SCM is the ERP, with distribution or discrete-manufacturing warehouse complexity within mid-enterprise scope.
Tier-1 extreme-throughput operations (Manhattan or Blue Yonder better), SAP shops (SAP EWM natural), Oracle shops (Oracle WMS Cloud cleaner), or DTC ecommerce fulfillment (Logiwa better fit).
Strengths
- Native Microsoft 365, Power BI, Power Platform integration
- Microsoft Copilot integration since 2024
- Microsoft commercial agreement bundling competitive vs pure-play WMS
- FedRAMP authorized
- Strong Microsoft partner ecosystem (global)
Weaknesses
- Functional depth lighter than Manhattan/Blue Yonder/SAP EWM at extreme throughput
- Partner-dependent implementation quality varies
- Material-handling-equipment ecosystem less deep than pure-play WMS
Pricing tiers
partial- Dynamics 365 SCM (includes Warehouse)Per user; SCM + Manufacturing + Warehouse module$210 /mo
- Dynamics 365 SCM PremiumPer user; premium support and additional add-onsQuote
- Dynamics 365 F&O Bundle (Finance + SCM)Per user; full F&O bundle with discount$300 /mo
- · Implementation services ($500K-$5M+ via Avanade, KPMG, Microsoft partners)
- · Power Platform credits sometimes bundled, sometimes separate
- · Industry-specific accelerator add-ons
- · Material-handling-equipment integration priced separately
Key features
- +Receiving and putaway via Warehouse Management mobile app
- +Slot optimization
- +Wave and batch picking
- +Pack and ship with parcel manifest
- +Cycle counting
- +Labor tracking
- +Native D365 SCM ERP integration
- +Power BI reporting and Microsoft Copilot
Oracle Warehouse Management Cloud
Cloud WMS from the LogFire acquisition; default for Oracle ERP, SCM Cloud, and NetSuite-enterprise customers.
Oracle Warehouse Management Cloud (Oracle WMS Cloud) is the cloud-native WMS derived from the LogFire acquisition (Oracle acquired LogFire in 2016) and substantially extended within the Oracle SCM Cloud suite 2018-2025. The product covers full Tier-1 warehouse execution: receiving, putaway, slot optimization, wave and batch picking, pack and ship, parcel manifest, cycle counting, and labor management. Distinct from Oracle E-Business Suite WMS (the legacy on-prem WMS being phased out) and from NetSuite WMS (NetSuite's lighter ERP-bundled module covered separately). Best fit for Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP customers, Oracle SCM Cloud customers, and NetSuite-enterprise customers where throughput exceeds NetSuite WMS limits. Strengths: cloud-native (Oracle Cloud Infrastructure), quarterly release cadence, native integration with Oracle Fusion ERP and Oracle SCM Cloud, and strong 3PL multi-client warehousing support. Trade-offs: Oracle sales tactics reported as aggressive (audit-driven license expansion), Oracle Cloud Infrastructure required (not multi-cloud), and material-handling-equipment integration ecosystem less deep than Manhattan or Blue Yonder.
Oracle Fusion Cloud ERP customers, Oracle SCM Cloud customers, and NetSuite-enterprise customers ($200M-$5B+ revenue) needing a Tier-1 cloud WMS with native Oracle integration; particularly 3PLs with multi-client warehousing requirements.
SAP shops (SAP EWM natural choice), sub-$200M revenue operations (NetSuite WMS or Logiwa better fit), Microsoft-anchored shops (D365 SCM Warehouse cleaner), or buyers prioritizing fair sales relationships and transparent pricing.
Strengths
- Cloud-native from LogFire acquisition; quarterly release cadence
- Native integration with Oracle Fusion ERP and Oracle SCM Cloud
- Strong 3PL multi-client warehousing support
- Mature parcel-manifest and carrier integration
- Public Oracle parent stability (NYSE:ORCL)
Weaknesses
- Oracle sales tactics reported as aggressive (audit-driven expansion)
- Oracle Cloud Infrastructure required (not multi-cloud)
- Material-handling-equipment ecosystem less deep than Manhattan/Blue Yonder
Pricing tiers
opaque- Oracle WMS Cloud (Mid-enterprise)~$300K-$1M/year typical for 1-3 warehousesQuote
- Oracle WMS Cloud (Tier-1 enterprise)$1M-$5M/year for multi-site operationsQuote
- Oracle SCM Cloud Suite (WMS + TMS + Inventory)$3M-$10M+/year for full SCM CloudQuote
- · Implementation services ($500K-$5M+ via Oracle Consulting or partners)
- · OCI infrastructure costs
- · Per-throughput scaling at order volume growth
- · Annual price increases reported at 6-9%
Key features
- +Directed receiving and putaway
- +Slot optimization
- +Wave and batch picking
- +Voice-pick and scan-pick
- +Pack and ship with parcel manifest
- +Labor management
- +3PL multi-client warehousing
- +Native Oracle SCM Cloud integration
Infor WMS (CloudSuite WMS)
Vertical depth in food, pharma, and 3PL; CloudSuite WMS cloud-native edition since 2021.
Infor WMS (sold as Infor CloudSuite WMS in the cloud-native edition since 2021) is the WMS within the Infor CloudSuite portfolio. Infor is Koch Industries-owned (acquired 2020 fully) and operates the largest vertical-ERP portfolio in the market. The WMS product has particular vertical depth in food and beverage (lot, expiry, catch-weight, FEFO), pharma (serialization, DSCSA, GxP), and 3PL (multi-client warehousing, billing, SLA tracking). Strengths: deepest food, pharma, and 3PL vertical depth in the WMS category, integration with Infor CloudSuite vertical ERPs (Infor M3, Infor LN, Infor CloudSuite Distribution, Infor CloudSuite Food and Beverage), and Koch Industries ownership stability. Trade-offs: cloud migration from on-prem Infor WMS (formerly SCE) is a multi-year project for legacy customers, product portfolio confusing (Infor WMS, Infor CloudSuite WMS, Infor SCE remained distinct in marketing through 2024), and US market share below Manhattan/Blue Yonder at Tier-1.
Food and beverage manufacturers and distributors (catch-weight, lot, expiry, FEFO), pharma manufacturers and distributors (DSCSA serialization, GxP), and 3PLs ($100M-$5B revenue) wanting deep vertical fit and Infor CloudSuite ERP integration.
Horizontal mid-market distribution without vertical complexity (NetSuite WMS or D365 SCM Warehouse adequate), SAP shops (SAP EWM natural), Manhattan/Blue Yonder shops already in those ecosystems, or buyers wanting the cleanest cloud-native product (Logiwa cleaner at SMB-mid).
Strengths
- Deepest food, pharma, and 3PL vertical depth
- Integration with Infor CloudSuite vertical ERPs
- Koch Industries ownership stability
- Strong 3PL multi-client warehousing and SLA billing
- CloudSuite WMS cloud-native edition since 2021
Weaknesses
- Cloud migration from on-prem Infor WMS is a multi-year project
- Product portfolio confusing (WMS, CloudSuite WMS, SCE distinctions)
- US Tier-1 market share below Manhattan/Blue Yonder
Pricing tiers
opaque- Infor CloudSuite WMS (Mid-enterprise)~$300K-$1M/year typicalQuote
- Infor CloudSuite WMS (Tier-1)$1M-$4M/year for multi-site operationsQuote
- Infor CloudSuite (WMS + Vertical ERP)$3M-$10M+/year for full vertical-ERP suiteQuote
- · Implementation services ($500K-$5M+ via Infor Services or partners)
- · Cloud migration from on-prem SCE reported as multi-year project
- · Per-module add-ons (3PL billing, labor, yard)
- · Annual price increases
Key features
- +Receiving, putaway, slot optimization
- +Wave and batch picking
- +Food and beverage (catch-weight, FEFO, lot, expiry)
- +Pharma serialization (DSCSA, GxP)
- +3PL multi-client warehousing and billing
- +Labor management
- +Yard and dock management
- +CloudSuite vertical ERP integration
NetSuite WMS
ERP-bundled WMS for NetSuite OneWorld customers; right answer when ERP drives the warehouse decision.
NetSuite WMS is the warehouse module bundled with Oracle NetSuite ERP, sold as a NetSuite add-on module. The product covers core warehouse execution: receiving, putaway, basic slot optimization, wave and batch picking via NetSuite WMS mobile app, pack and ship, cycle counting, and inventory accuracy. Distinct from Oracle WMS Cloud (Oracle's Tier-1 standalone WMS covered separately) which has meaningfully more depth at extreme throughput. NetSuite WMS is the right answer when NetSuite OneWorld is already the ERP system of record and warehouse complexity is mid-market (not extreme throughput, not heavy material-handling-automation). Best fit for NetSuite OneWorld customers at $50M-$500M revenue with 1-3 warehouses and mid-velocity distribution. Strengths: native NetSuite ERP integration (no separate warehouse system to maintain), included in the NetSuite commercial relationship, mobile app workflow, and deep integration with NetSuite inventory and procurement. Trade-offs: functional depth meaningfully lighter than Tier-1 standalone WMS (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, SAP EWM, Oracle WMS Cloud), throughput limits hit at high-velocity DTC ecommerce or 3PL operations, and post-Oracle ownership pricing dynamics (8-12% annual increases on NetSuite generally).
NetSuite OneWorld customers ($50M-$500M revenue, 1-3 warehouses, mid-velocity distribution) where NetSuite is already the ERP system of record and warehouse complexity is within mid-market scope.
Tier-1 extreme-throughput operations (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, SAP EWM, or Oracle WMS Cloud better), high-velocity DTC ecommerce fulfillment (Logiwa better fit), SAP shops (SAP EWM natural), or QuickBooks-anchored SMB (Fishbowl appropriate).
Strengths
- Native NetSuite ERP integration (single platform)
- Included in NetSuite commercial relationship
- NetSuite WMS mobile app workflow
- Right fit for NetSuite OneWorld mid-market distributors
- Public Oracle parent stability
Weaknesses
- Functional depth lighter than Tier-1 standalone WMS
- Throughput limits at high-velocity DTC or 3PL operations
- NetSuite annual price increases of 8-12% reported
Pricing tiers
opaque- NetSuite WMS (add-on to NetSuite ERP)~$50K-$200K/year typical add-on cost on top of NetSuite ERPQuote
- NetSuite WMS (multi-site)Per-site or per-throughput pricingQuote
- · NetSuite ERP subscription required (base $30K-$500K+/year)
- · Implementation services via NetSuite SuiteSuccess or partners
- · Per-user scaling adds up at warehouse-employee count
- · Annual price increases of 8-12% reported on NetSuite
Key features
- +Receiving and putaway
- +Basic slot optimization
- +Wave and batch picking via mobile app
- +Pack and ship
- +Cycle counting
- +Native NetSuite ERP integration
- +Inventory accuracy
- +Mobile barcode scanning
Logiwa WMS
Cloud-native WMS for DTC ecommerce fulfillment and high-velocity 3PLs; not an enterprise SAP/Manhattan replacement.
Logiwa WMS is a cloud-native WMS purpose-built for direct-to-consumer (DTC) ecommerce fulfillment and high-velocity 3PLs. Founded 2017, privately funded (Series B 2021), and headquartered in Chicago with a global engineering presence. The product covers DTC-focused warehouse execution: receiving, putaway, picking (including ecommerce-optimized batch and zone picking), pack and ship with parcel-manifest integration to 250+ carriers, returns processing, and 3PL multi-client billing. Best fit for DTC ecommerce brands ($5M-$200M revenue) and growing 3PLs needing rapid implementation and modern UX, not Tier-1 enterprise replacement for Manhattan, Blue Yonder, or SAP EWM. Strengths: pricing more transparent than Tier-1 incumbents (Logiwa publishes starting pricing and offers self-service trials in some bands), cloud-native architecture, deep parcel-carrier integration (250+ carriers), strong Shopify and ecommerce-platform integration, and rapid implementation (6-12 weeks typical, vs Tier-1 9-18 months). Trade-offs: not an enterprise SAP/Manhattan alternative, smaller partner ecosystem, less material-handling-equipment depth, and limited multi-language and EU regulatory coverage relative to Korber.
DTC ecommerce brands ($5M-$200M revenue) and growing 3PLs needing rapid implementation, modern UX, and deep ecommerce-platform integration; particularly Shopify Plus brands and high-velocity small-parcel fulfillment.
Tier-1 enterprise operations (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, SAP EWM, Oracle WMS Cloud better), heavy material-handling-automation environments (Tier-1 incumbents deeper), SAP/Oracle/NetSuite-anchored shops where bundled WMS is the natural choice, or EU enterprises wanting deep local coverage (Korber better fit).
Strengths
- Cloud-native architecture purpose-built for DTC ecommerce
- Deep parcel-carrier integration (250+ carriers)
- Rapid implementation (6-12 weeks typical)
- Strong Shopify and ecommerce-platform integration
- Pricing more transparent than Tier-1 incumbents
Weaknesses
- Not an enterprise SAP/Manhattan alternative at Tier-1 throughput
- Smaller partner ecosystem than Tier-1 incumbents
- Less multi-language and EU regulatory coverage
Pricing tiers
partial- Logiwa IO (Starter)Single warehouse, low-volume; starting estimate per Logiwa public messaging$1500 /mo
- Logiwa IO (Growth)Multi-warehouse or higher throughput; typical $30K-$120K/yearQuote
- Logiwa IO (Enterprise)$120K-$500K+/year for high-velocity 3PLs and ecommerce brandsQuote
- · Implementation services (typically $15K-$80K)
- · Per-throughput or per-order scaling at growth
- · Custom carrier integration fees
- · Per-warehouse pricing at multi-site
Key features
- +Cloud-native DTC ecommerce fulfillment
- +Wave, batch, zone picking
- +Pack and ship with 250+ parcel carriers
- +Returns processing
- +3PL multi-client warehousing and billing
- +Shopify, BigCommerce, ecommerce-platform integration
- +Mobile barcode scanning
- +Real-time order orchestration
Fishbowl Warehouse
SMB on-premise WMS with native QuickBooks integration; default for QuickBooks-anchored small manufacturers and distributors.
Fishbowl Warehouse is an on-premise (with a cloud-hosted option) WMS and inventory-management system purpose-built for SMB manufacturers and distributors, with native QuickBooks Desktop and QuickBooks Online integration as the defining feature. Founded 2001, privately held, and headquartered in Orem, Utah. Distinct from Fishbowl Manufacturing (the related Fishbowl product for light-manufacturing workflows). The product covers core SMB warehouse and inventory: receiving, putaway, basic picking, pack and ship, barcode workflows, cycle counting, and inventory accuracy. Best fit for QuickBooks-anchored US SMB manufacturers and distributors (sub-100 employees) needing real inventory and barcode workflows on top of QuickBooks. Strengths: native QuickBooks integration (the primary purchase reason), one-time perpetual-license option (vs subscription-only Tier-1 WMS), SMB-friendly pricing (low five-figure entry), and US small-business support orientation. Trade-offs: on-premise architecture (cloud-hosted option exists but is not cloud-native), limited scalability above ~500-employee operations, smaller integration ecosystem than cloud-native peers, and the user experience is dated compared to modern cloud WMS.
QuickBooks-anchored US SMB manufacturers and distributors (sub-100 employees, single warehouse, sub-$50M revenue) needing real inventory and barcode workflows with native QuickBooks Desktop or Online integration.
Cloud-native ecommerce fulfillment (Logiwa better), NetSuite-anchored mid-market (NetSuite WMS appropriate), mid-large enterprise (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, SAP EWM, Korber better), or multi-site high-velocity operations.
Strengths
- Native QuickBooks Desktop and Online integration
- One-time perpetual-license option (SMB-friendly)
- Low five-figure entry pricing typical
- Strong US small-business support orientation
- Right fit for QuickBooks-anchored SMB manufacturers
Weaknesses
- On-premise architecture (cloud-hosted exists but is not cloud-native)
- Limited scalability above ~500-employee operations
- User experience dated compared to modern cloud WMS
Pricing tiers
partial- Fishbowl Warehouse (Perpetual)One-time license starting ~$4,395 per user historical; updated quote-based$0 /mo
- Fishbowl Warehouse (Subscription)Subscription option per user; cloud-hosted availableQuote
- Fishbowl Warehouse (Enterprise SMB)Multi-user and multi-location SMB scopeQuote
- · Annual support and update fees (perpetual license)
- · Per-user scaling
- · Cloud-hosting fee (if not on-prem)
- · Implementation and training fees
Key features
- +Native QuickBooks integration
- +Receiving and putaway
- +Basic picking workflows
- +Pack and ship
- +Barcode scanning
- +Cycle counting
- +Inventory accuracy
- +Light manufacturing workflows (Fishbowl Manufacturing add-on)
Frequently asked questions
The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.
Korber Inconso versus SAP EWM for a German Mittelstand manufacturer: how do I choose?
How does the SAP WM 2025 end-of-life affect German SAP customers?
What is the role of AEB GmbH and Atlas customs integration in German WMS?
What is the actual difference between a Tier-1 standalone WMS (Manhattan, Blue Yonder, SAP EWM) and an ERP-bundled WMS (NetSuite WMS, D365 SCM Warehouse)?
Cloud-versus-on-prem in enterprise WMS: what is the actual 2026 split, and should I move?
How long does a Tier-1 WMS implementation actually take?
3PL versus in-house WMS: when does each make sense?
What is the status of Blue Yonder post-Panasonic acquisition?
SAP EWM versus SAP Inventory Management (IM): which do I need?
How seriously should I take vendor "AI-driven slotting" claims?
How should pricing be evaluated when most enterprise WMS is opaque?
Final word
Looking at a different market? See the global Warehouse Management Software (WMS) ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.
Last updated 2026-05-23. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.