Ledger

A chart of accounts built for audit-ready clarity

Define your financial structure once. Classify consistently across teams, enforce rules at the source, and keep reporting reliable as operations scale.

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Structure that makes reporting trustworthy

Ledger gives you a financial backbone: consistent classification, traceability, and a chart of accounts designed for real operations.

Clean structure
A chart of accounts that maps to your operating model—projects, departments, and ownership.
Consistent classification
Rules and templates reduce variance so the same event is classified the same way every time.
Traceability by default
Track changes, ownership, and rationale so classifications don’t depend on memory.
Audit-ready output
Make reviews faster with a structure that supports evidence, controls, and governance.

How Ledger works

Design the structure, apply classification rules at the source, and keep the trail complete for review and audits.

Design the chart
Create accounts aligned to your reporting needs with naming conventions and ownership.
Classify consistently
Apply rules and templates so teams use the same categories across time and workflows.
Review and audit
Keep history and evidence so audits and month-end reviews become a controlled process.
Ledger product view

Capabilities built for finance operators

Tools designed to keep your chart of accounts clean, usable, and enforceable across the organization.

Chart of accounts
Create and manage account hierarchies, naming conventions, and ownership per organization.
Classification rules
Standardize how transactions are categorized with templates and guardrails that reduce drift.
Imports and templates
Onboard faster with CSV/XLSX templates and imports that keep structure consistent.
Controls and governance
Role-based permissions and history help ensure the ledger stays audit-ready over time.

KPIs that keep structure healthy

Measure classification quality and close velocity to reduce rework and improve reliability.

Classification coverage
Share of entries mapped to ledger accounts consistently.
Reclassification rate
How often items need corrections after initial classification.
Close lag
Days to close periods with consistent classification and evidence.
Audit prep time
Time spent assembling evidence and explaining classifications.

Build an audit-ready financial structure

Start with one principle: define the chart and classification rules once, then enforce them at the source.