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Workshop billing software vs accounting software — what is the difference?

It's a question every workshop owner asks at some point: “If I have Tally / QuickBooks / Zoho Books, why do I also need workshop billing software?” Short answer — they do different jobs.

Accounting software

Tally, QuickBooks, Zoho Books, Xero, MYOB — these are built for the books. They're what your accountant uses for:

  • Recording invoices for tax filing (GSTR / BAS / VAT returns)
  • Tracking accounts receivable / payable
  • Bank reconciliation
  • P&L and balance sheet generation

What they're not built for: writing an estimate fast, running the bay floor, tracking parts, sending an e-signature link to the customer, taking online payment, or capturing service history per car.

Workshop billing software

Autodots and tools like it are built for the day-to-day shop floor:

  • Estimates with services + parts + labour, sent for e-signature
  • Invoices generated from estimates in one click
  • Inventory deducts as parts get billed
  • Online payment via UPI / card / NetBanking
  • Customer service history per vehicle
  • Workboard, time tracking, photo inspections

How they work together

The healthy pattern: workshop software runs the shop, accounting software runs the books. One nightly export bridges them — Autodots' CSV export pushes the day's invoices into Tally / QuickBooks / Xero so your accountant has clean data without anyone re-typing.

Don't try to run a shop in Tally. It's technically possible but you'll spend hours doing what the workshop tool does in seconds.

When you only need accounting

If you have a one-person shop doing fewer than 5 jobs a week, sometimes pure accounting + a spreadsheet is enough. But the moment you hit 10+ jobs a week, the time saved by the workshop side pays for itself.

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