Payroll and HR built for accountants and their clients
QuickBooks Payroll is the natural choice for businesses already in the QuickBooks ecosystem. The seamless accounting sync eliminates double-entry and keeps the books clean with minimal effort.
Base fee plus per-person fee. Multiple plans available.
QuickBooks Payroll is a cloud-based payroll solution built by Intuit, designed for small businesses that already use QuickBooks Online for accounting. Its defining characteristic is seamless integration with the QuickBooks accounting ecosystem — payroll data flows directly into your books with no manual journal entries, no data export, and no reconciliation lag. If you run QuickBooks Online, adding QuickBooks Payroll is the most frictionless payroll option available.
Important 2026 context: QuickBooks Desktop Payroll has been phased out. As of September 2024, Intuit stopped selling new QuickBooks Desktop Pro Plus, Premier Plus, and Mac Plus subscriptions. This review covers QuickBooks Online Payroll — the current, actively developed product. Desktop payroll support continues for existing Enterprise subscribers only.
Pricing: From $50/month + $6/employee (Simple Start) | Free trial available
QuickBooks Online Payroll is a full-service payroll product offered in three tiers: Core, Premium, and Elite. All tiers include automated federal, state, and local payroll tax filing; direct deposit; W-2 distribution; and employee self-service. Higher tiers add time tracking (via QuickBooks Time), same-day direct deposit, HR advisory access, and a tax penalty guarantee.
QuickBooks Payroll is intentionally positioned as an accounting-first payroll product. The target user is a small business owner or bookkeeper who wants payroll to live inside their accounting software, not alongside it. This is its greatest strength and also its primary limitation: the platform is optimised for accounting integration above all else, which means it lacks the HR depth of dedicated HRIS platforms.
The high ratings from professional review platforms (Capterra, Forbes, PCMag, Software Advice) versus the extremely negative Trustpilot score tells a consistent story: the product works well for the typical small business user, but when things go wrong — particularly with tax filing or support escalations — the experience is significantly worse than competitors like Gusto.
QuickBooks Online Payroll is available in three tiers:
For a 10-person company: Core costs $110/month ($1,320/year), Premium costs $175/month ($2,100/year), Elite costs $240/month ($2,880/year). Note that Intuit frequently offers 50% off promotional pricing for the first year — always check current promotions before comparing sticker prices.
All QuickBooks Payroll plans include full-service tax handling: the platform calculates, files, and pays all federal, state, and local payroll taxes automatically. Year-end W-2 and 1099 distribution is included. This is the baseline expectation for full-service payroll in 2026, and QuickBooks delivers it reliably for the vast majority of straightforward small business payrolls. Where it struggles is in complex scenarios: multi-state employees with unique allocations, irregular bonus runs, and retroactive corrections.
Payroll transactions post automatically to the QBO chart of accounts in real time. Gross wages, taxes, deductions, and employer contributions map directly to the correct accounts. For small business owners who reconcile their own books, this eliminates hours of monthly manual data entry and reduces reconciliation errors. This integration is the feature reviewers cite most often as the reason they use QuickBooks Payroll over competitors.
Next-day direct deposit is available on Core and above. Same-day direct deposit is available on Premium and Elite. Paper checks can be printed directly from the platform. Contractors (1099) can be paid alongside employees in the same payroll run.
Employees access their pay stubs, W-2s, and personal information through the QuickBooks Workforce portal (mobile app and web). Employees can complete onboarding paperwork and enter their own direct deposit information digitally. The self-service portal reduces administrative burden for small teams without dedicated HR staff.
Premium and Elite plans include QuickBooks Time (formerly TSheets), a dedicated time tracking product with GPS tracking for field workers, project time tracking, and shift scheduling. For small businesses with hourly employees or field crews, bundling QuickBooks Time with payroll eliminates the need for a separate time tracking subscription and removes the integration step between time data and payroll.
QuickBooks Payroll includes basic HR functionality: digital onboarding with I-9 verification, employee document storage, offer letter templates, and access to an HR support centre (Premium and Elite). The HR advisory feature in Premium gives access to HR professionals for compliance questions. This is functional for very small businesses but is not a substitute for a dedicated HRIS; there is no performance management, applicant tracking, or benefits administration beyond basic plan enrollments.
Ease of use is consistently highly rated. The dashboard is clean, the payroll run flow is linear and guided, and automated reminders prevent missed payroll dates. The initial setup — entering company information, employee data, and pay history — can feel involved for first-time payroll software users, but Intuit provides setup guides and, on Elite, dedicated setup support. Once configured, running payroll is described by most reviewers as taking 5–15 minutes per pay period for a typical small business.
Self-guided setup is the standard path for Core and Premium. The process covers: company information and tax IDs, employee data entry, pay schedule configuration, direct deposit authorization, and prior payroll data entry (if mid-year). Most small businesses can complete setup in 1–3 hours. Elite customers get a dedicated setup expert who walks through configuration and validates accuracy before the first payroll run.
Support is the most discussed weakness and the most significant differentiator versus Gusto. The documented issues: support representatives who are insufficiently trained to handle complex payroll and tax scenarios, long wait times via phone, and inability to resolve errors in a timely manner. For simple questions, the QBO knowledge base and community forums are well-resourced. For anything requiring tax correction or error investigation, support quality is inconsistent. Reddit’s r/QuickBooks community is full of cautionary tales. On the Elite plan, a dedicated payroll expert is assigned; this significantly improves the support experience and is worth considering for businesses where payroll errors would be costly.
The most common direct comparison and the most instructive one. Gusto offers similar pricing ($40/month + $6/employee on Simple tier), but with significantly better support, more HR features (employee handbook builder, compliance alerts, benefits administration, PTO policies), and a better-designed product for companies without accounting software integration as a primary requirement. Gusto is the better standalone payroll choice for most small businesses. QuickBooks Payroll wins only when QBO integration is the top priority.
ADP Run targets a similar market (1–150 employees) but with a more robust HR feature set and a larger compliance support network. ADP pricing is quote-based and often higher than QuickBooks. ADP has better support for complex multi-state and growing-business scenarios. QuickBooks wins on ease of use, transparent pricing, and QBO integration. Choose ADP when compliance depth and support quality are more important than accounting integration.
Rippling is a significantly broader platform — payroll plus HR, IT management, and device provisioning. It starts at $8/employee/month (payroll module only) with a company-wide platform fee. Rippling is the better choice for tech-forward companies wanting a unified HR/IT platform. QuickBooks is simpler and better integrated with accounting for businesses that don’t need Rippling’s scope.
Patriot is the budget alternative — full-service payroll from $37/month + $4/employee. Patriot integrates with QuickBooks Online (though not as natively). For very small businesses where cost is the primary driver and the QBO integration advantage is less important, Patriot is worth evaluating. QuickBooks wins on integration depth, UX polish, and product support resources.
QuickBooks Online Payroll is not being discontinued — it is actively developed and Intuit’s primary payroll product. QuickBooks Desktop Payroll has been phased out for most users. As of September 2024, Intuit stopped selling new Desktop Pro Plus, Premier Plus, and Mac Plus subscriptions. Existing Enterprise subscribers can still renew Desktop payroll for now. If you run Desktop payroll, you need a migration plan.
For small businesses using QuickBooks Online: yes, QuickBooks Payroll is generally the better choice due to seamless accounting integration and transparent pricing. For businesses not using QBO, or for companies with complex multi-state payroll and HR needs: ADP offers better compliance support, HR features, and scalability. QuickBooks supports up to around 150 employees comfortably; ADP scales to thousands.
Gusto offers better HR features, better support, and more employee-friendly tools at a similar price. QuickBooks Payroll offers better accounting integration for QBO users. If accounting integration is your primary concern: choose QuickBooks. If standalone payroll with good support and HR tools is the priority: Gusto is the stronger product for most small businesses.
Core starts at $50/month + $6/employee. Premium is $85/month + $9/employee. Elite is $130/month + $11/employee. A 10-person company pays $110–$240/month depending on plan. Intuit frequently offers 50% first-year promotional discounts.
Yes, QuickBooks Online Payroll supports multi-state payroll. However, for companies with significant complexity — employees in many states, unique local jurisdictions, or complex apportionment rules — a dedicated payroll provider like ADP or Gusto may handle edge cases more reliably.
Yes, for standard payroll scenarios. The setup is guided, running payroll is intuitive, and automation reduces the number of manual steps. Where it becomes harder: complex payroll scenarios, retroactive corrections, and anything requiring support intervention. For a small business with straightforward salaried and hourly employees, most users can run payroll confidently within a few pay periods.
QuickBooks Payroll is the right choice in one specific scenario: you already use QuickBooks Online and want payroll that integrates natively with your accounting. In that scenario, it is the best option on the market. The automated tax filing, transparent pricing, and QBO integration make it the default recommendation for small businesses in the Intuit ecosystem.
Outside that scenario, it is hard to justify over Gusto, which offers better HR features, better support, and comparable payroll functionality at similar pricing. The Trustpilot score and Reddit commentary about support are real signals — not representative of the average user, but indicative of what happens when things go wrong.