QWhat is the difference between Intuit Enterprise Suite and QuickBooks Enterprise?
QuickBooks Enterprise is desktop accounting built around a single company file, with very strong inventory and a low cost of entry. Intuit Enterprise Suite is a cloud platform built for multiple entities, with real-time consolidation and intercompany eliminations, up to 20 dimensions, and AI-assisted automation. Enterprise suits single-entity, inventory-heavy SMBs; IES suits multi-entity, cloud-first mid-market organizations.
QIs Intuit Enterprise Suite a replacement for QuickBooks Enterprise?
Not exactly — they target different needs. IES is the step up for organizations that need multi-entity consolidation and dimensional, cloud-based reporting. Inventory-heavy single-entity businesses may be better served on QuickBooks Enterprise Platinum or Diamond. It’s about fit, not a straight upgrade.
QWhich has better inventory?
QuickBooks Enterprise — clearly. Its Advanced Inventory (Platinum and Diamond) offers multi-location stock, barcode scanning, lot and serial tracking, and assemblies. IES inventory is lighter. If inventory is core to your business, that’s a strong point in Enterprise’s favor.
QWhich handles multiple entities better?
Intuit Enterprise Suite — clearly. It manages multiple entities from one login with real-time consolidation and automatic intercompany eliminations. QuickBooks Enterprise can combine reports across company files into Excel, but that’s an aggregated roll-up, not true consolidation. For genuine multi-entity finance, IES is built for it.
QHow do their costs compare?
QuickBooks Enterprise starts around $1,500/yr (up to 20% off MSRP through CPAWarehouse). Intuit Enterprise Suite is custom-priced, with independent estimates roughly $8,000/yr single-entity to $12,000–$15,000+/yr multi-entity. IES costs more because it does more for multi-entity organizations — but it’s still far below typical ERP pricing.
QIs IES cloud and Enterprise desktop?
Yes. IES is cloud-native, accessed from one login anywhere. QuickBooks Enterprise is desktop software, though it can be cloud-hosted through approved providers for anywhere access. If cloud-native is a requirement, IES has the edge; if you’re comfortable with desktop or hosting, Enterprise works well.
QCan I move from QuickBooks Enterprise to IES later?
Yes. Many businesses start on QuickBooks Enterprise and move to Intuit Enterprise Suite when they add entities or outgrow desktop reporting. Our team can help you plan that transition when the time is right — and tell you honestly when it isn’t yet necessary.
QHow do I decide which one to buy?
Start with two questions: how many entities you run, and how central inventory is. Multiple entities needing consolidation point to IES; single-entity with heavy inventory points to Enterprise. For anything in between, contact our team — we’ll give you a straight recommendation based on your situation.