Intuit Has Been Raising the Price of Quickbooks Every Year

by | Dec 20, 2022

I got my annual “Your price for Quickbooks increased because we can” email from Intuit. They want me to pay almost 40% more than I paid two years ago.

Intuit is a master of nickel and diming and raising prices. Because they can. Apparently.

They know their customers don’t want to leave and rewire their accounting systems. All accounting software companies play this game.

My accounting needs are pretty simple. I don’t need an accountant or bookkeeper or payroll or any the stuff they constantly upsell.

Where is the viable competitor for Quickbooks that plays a more honest game?

Software pricing doesn’t reflect labor or supply chain costs like an automobile or a hamburger. Prices are only a function of what people will pay relative to the alternative.

Intuit’s annual price increases mean they are really not serving micro businesses that don’t want to pay $1000+ for software and fees. There’s a growing opportunity there. Who’s taking that?

Now that Mailchimp is part of Intuit, you know where this is going. Already got the 10% price increase because we can.

Greg Head posted this on LinkedIn on December 20, 2022.

Check out the comments and join the discussion on LinkedIn.

Related Posts

Gregslist Phoenix is Now Curated by PHX FWD

This week, after almost 10 years, my Gregslist of Phoenix Software Companies officially moves to a new home and a new host at PHX FWD at https://www.phxfwd.org/the-list. I created Gregslist.com/Phoenix as a comprehensive, curated, and ...

Unsexy SaaS is Cool Again

Biographies of successful entrepreneurs share one lesson that you won’t read about in most “how-to” business books: None of the wildly successful and famous people started out that way. They were just “normal” people who did very abnormal ...

Where Are All The $100M Bootstrapped SaaS Success Stories?

If SaaS and AI software bootstrapping works so well, why don't we hear about more $100M ARR independent success stories? There are far more bootstrapped software companies in the world than VC-funded ones. Yet when people think about big ...
No results found.