Airbase headquartered in San Francisco offers a cloud-based accounts payable and spend management solution, and combines a pre-approval system with corporate cards, allowing users to manage the entire AP spend process in one place.
We moved to Ramp from Airbase. All of these are similar aside from Bill and Diivy managing card spend and invoicing in two platforms. Ramp overall is better and free for our company compared to paying Airbase
We originally were evaluating Stampli when looking for a corporate spend solution. We decided to go with Airbase for two reasons: 1) Pricing structure and 2) Employee Reimbursements. Airbase pricing was based on actual number of payments initiated, whereas Stampli was based on …
Much easier to use, the application in particular. Cost effective. One place for pretty much everything. Abacus had a better reimbursement process, but the other tools Airbase offered made it clear the direction we should go in.
Airbase is much more user-friendly than Expensify for the end user submitting reimbursements. When we selected Airbase, BILL did not have a virtual card program, which set Airbase apart from the rest.
I'm not a decision maker for choosing which vendor we use here. I believe Airbase was fairly new and my company was small as well, so they tend to like to partner with companies that have a lot of potential but the cost to use may be lower. We scale with you, I think, is the …
This is based on my knowledge about these platforms as they were 4-5 years ago: Airbase is more user-friendly at all levels, but reporting needs some improvements. SAP Concur had great and complex reporting at that time, but it was not user-friendly, and it was the most …
It has a better interface and better cashback, is easier to set up, and is just a much more complete product overall. Airbase is a start-up - they understand the challenges of start-ups, and we couldn't be happier with our choice. We migrated from bill.com to airbase and have …
I have used various V Card and P Card solutions in the past, but I don't think any really compare to Airbase. It's really an all-in-one solution. There are a few more areas I think they should move into, but they've made significant progress there - such as procurement …
Accounting typically selects which software we use and being in FP&A I'm typically leverage the tool for approvals and to get more insights into vendors and spend. For my use case, I think all 3 are comparable and think Airbase stacks up well against the competition. I'm not …
Airbase is more robust, does more of our activities. With Expensify we would have to have continued to use other systems as well. We use Quickbooks for accounting but the invoice and billing process isn't robust enough for our needs, so that is why we use Airbase as well.
We chose Airbase for the virtual cards and cashback. Having complete control over our software spending via virtual cards was important to us for several reasons, including security, audit, budgetary, etc. We knew it had functions for expenses and bill payments, so we thought …
After bidding out several vendors, we arrived at Airbase as our solution, as it seemed to be a better fit for our sized company that Paycom or Concur, which we deemed as more expensive and solutions for larger companies. Airbase was very fine tuned to our needs and made us feel …
Airbase had more robust payment options and a stronger mobile app than Spendesk. We like the digital credit cards offered that at the time Spendesk did not provide. Spendesk is a European company, so they are more established there than the United States. With Airbase being a …