Docyt
AI agents for SMB bookkeeping with deep POS and multi-entity support.
Each dimension is a composite of public signals. The Index is a weighted average; weights are published on the methodology page.
Where the tool plays across the 15-category taxonomy used by this index.
The system of record — chart of accounts, journal entries, trial balance.
Classifying bank and card transactions against a chart of accounts.
Matching ledger entries to bank statements; flagging discrepancies.
Bill capture, vendor management, approval workflows, payment execution.
Invoicing, dunning, collections, payment matching.
Accruals, deferrals, depreciation, task orchestration, review workflows.
P&L, balance sheet, cash flow, variance analysis, board-ready packs.
Income tax, sales tax / VAT / moms, nexus tracking, e-filing.
Documentation, PBC lists, evidence trails, auditor collaboration.
Wage calculation, withholdings, benefits, regulatory filings.
Inter-company elimination, currency translation, consolidated statements.
ASC 606 / IFRS 15 automation, performance-obligation tracking.
Corporate cards, expense policy, reimbursements, spend controls.
Forecasting, budgeting, scenario modeling, variance commentary.
Conversational query, report generation, and action-taking via chat.
Docyt's distinguishing feature is its integration depth — it connects to 30+ point-of-sale systems and offers native multi-entity consolidation that few of the other AI-native SMB players support. The "GARY" agent handles document extraction through variance analysis, and the product is especially well-fit for franchise / multi-location SMBs that outgrow QuickBooks but don't need a full ERP.
Traction is quieter than Puzzle or Digits — Docyt hasn't pursued the venture-rounds-as-PR strategy those competitors have, and its customer base is more industry-specific (restaurants, service businesses, auto-dealerships). For those segments, Docyt is often the best answer on the market.