Multi Currency Accounting Software

Invoice and report in multiple currencies — while keeping your books in one base currency. Clear exchange rates and FX differences, with numbers you can explain.

Foreign currency accounting without confusion

Foreign Currency Accounting

Working in more than one currency touches everything: invoices, payments, bank accounts, and reports. Foreign currency accounting software helps you decide where currency lives — base currency for reporting, transaction currencies for doing business — and how they meet.

Bookkeeping AI keeps those roles clear: you see which invoices, bills, and bank accounts are in which currencies, how they translate into base currency, and where FX differences come from when rates move between invoice and payment dates.

Base vs. transaction currencies

Separate the currency you report in from the currencies you sell and pay in — with clear labels on invoices, bills, and bank accounts.

Consistent FX treatment

Apply clear rules to how foreign currency transactions are translated into base currency — so reports stay consistent over time.

Typical multi-currency cases

Support common scenarios like international sales, remote teams, and suppliers billing in foreign currencies.

Multi-currency invoicing with clear rates and dates

Multi Currency Invoicing

When you invoice in more than one currency, exchange rates become part of the story. Multi currency invoicing means you know which rate was used, where it came from, and how it affects the amount shown in base currency.

Bookkeeping AI helps you manage rates and their timing: you can use configured rate sources, see the rate applied to each invoice, and understand how that invoice looks both in the client’s currency and in your base currency for reporting.

Rates with sources and dates

Keep track of which rate source you use and the date of the rate — so questions about “why this amount?” are easier to answer.

Invoices in client and base currencies

See invoice amounts in the client’s currency and in base currency — so sales and finance talk about the same deal with the same numbers.

Multi-currency reporting and FX gains/losses you can explain

Multi Currency Reporting

Exchange rates move between invoice and payment. Multi currency reporting needs to show you what was booked at the time of the invoice, what happened when cash arrived, and where FX gains or losses appear.

Bookkeeping AI separates operational results from FX effects: you can see revenue and costs in base currency, plus dedicated lines for FX revaluations — so discussions about performance don’t get lost in rate noise.

Revaluation and FX impact

Understand how revaluation entries and FX differences affect your P&L and balance sheet — without digging through raw journal lines.

Reports in base and transaction currencies

View summaries in base currency, with the ability to see underlying transactions in their original currencies when needed.

Clear audit trail for FX

Keep a clear history of which rates were used, when revaluations were made, and how FX entries tie back to original invoices and payments.

Multi-currency invoices and payments that still reconcile

When a client pays in a different currency, the bank deposit, the invoice, and the accounting entry all need to agree. Multi currency accounting software helps you match these pieces, even when the amounts don’t line up exactly because of FX.

Bookkeeping AI keeps links between invoices, payments, and FX differences visible — so you can explain why a foreign‑currency invoice and its eventual deposit look slightly different in base currency, without losing track of which is which.

Matching foreign invoices to deposits

Match foreign‑currency invoices to bank deposits in base or foreign currency — with visibility into rate differences.

Ready for reconciliation and reporting

Keep multi‑currency activity organized so reconciliation and management reports line up, even when rate movements are involved.

Multi-currency accounting that stays understandable

Use multi currency accounting software that keeps rates, currencies, and FX differences visible — so you can trade globally while keeping local reporting and explanations simple.