For the roughly 2.6 million small and medium businesses that make up the backbone of the Australian economy, the last week of the month follows a familiar script: a shoebox of receipts, a bank feed full of mystery transactions, and a bookkeeper or business owner squinting at whether that fuel stop should be coded to travel or plant hire — and whether the GST on it stacks up. It is unglamorous, error-prone work, and it is exactly the kind of task the current wave of business software is racing to automate.
Australian expense-management fintech Budgetly is the latest to plant a flag in that territory. The company has launched a suite of AI bookkeeping features aimed squarely at local SMEs, promising to automate the grunt work of transaction coding, GST checks and receipt reviews on selected plans. According to IT Brief Australia, the pitch is simple: hand the repetitive month-end admin to software and give business owners their evenings back.
What Budgetly is actually shipping
Budgetly built its name as a spend-management platform, issuing prepaid and virtual cards to staff and pulling the resulting transactions into a single dashboard that syncs with accounting tools such as Xero. The new AI layer sits on top of that plumbing. Rather than a human manually assigning each transaction to a general-ledger account, the system reads the merchant, the amount and the historical pattern of similar spending, then suggests — or applies — the correct code.
The GST component is the piece most likely to catch the eye of anyone who has wrestled with a Business Activity Statement. Not every purchase carries GST, and getting the treatment wrong on bank fees, overseas subscriptions or GST-free items is a common source of BAS headaches. Budgetly’s tooling is designed to flag transactions where the tax treatment looks off, giving the person doing the books a shortlist to review rather than a spreadsheet to comb line by line. Receipt review rounds out the offer: matching uploaded or emailed receipts to the right transaction and surfacing the ones that are missing documentation, which is precisely the evidence the Australian Taxation Office expects to see if it ever comes knocking.
The features are gated to certain plans rather than switched on for everyone, which positions the AI as a premium hook — a way to move existing customers up the pricing ladder and to differentiate against a crowded field of expense apps.
A crowded, fast-moving market
Budgetly is not operating in a vacuum. Intuit has been layering generative AI into Xero’s great rival, QuickBooks, while Xero itself has rolled out its “Just Ask Xero” assistant and continues to buy and build automation across its platform. Sydney-founded Weel (formerly DiviPay) plays in the same corporate-card-plus-controls space, and the big banks are steadily adding smarts to their business banking apps. For a mid-sized local player, the calculation is that owning the whole workflow — card, spend controls and now the bookkeeping intelligence — is more defensible than competing on any single feature.
The timing is deliberate. Business software vendors have spent the past two years bolting large language models onto their products, and customers have grown wary of features that demo well but stumble on real, messy data. By focusing on a narrow, high-frequency pain point — coding and GST — Budgetly is making a bet that practical, boring automation beats flashy chatbots for a small-business audience that measures software in hours saved, not novelty.
The case for, and the case for caution
Proponents of AI bookkeeping argue the maths is straightforward. If a business processes a few hundred transactions a month, shaving even a few seconds of decision-making off each one, plus eliminating the back-and-forth over missing receipts, adds up to real time. For sole traders and micro-businesses who do their own books after hours, that is time returned to actually running the business. For bookkeepers and BAS agents, automating the low-value coding frees them to focus on advisory work that clients will pay more for.
The accounting profession’s response has been more measured. Industry bodies including CPA Australia and Chartered Accountants ANZ have consistently cautioned that AI suggestions are only as good as the data feeding them, and that a confident-looking auto-code is still a liability if it is wrong. GST in particular is full of edge cases — mixed-supply invoices, imported services, reverse charges — where a model trained on typical patterns can quietly misfire. The consistent message from the profession is that automation should reduce the review burden, not remove the reviewer. Under Australian law the taxpayer, not the software, remains responsible for what is lodged with the ATO, and a registered BAS or tax agent is still the one signing off.
There is also a data-governance question that Australian businesses are increasingly alert to. Feeding transaction-level financial data into an AI system raises reasonable concerns about where that data is processed, how it is stored and whether it is used to train models. Budgetly’s status as a local operator may help on that front, but it is a question buyers should be asking of every vendor making similar claims.
Why it matters for Australia
Small business is where the productivity debate gets real. The Productivity Commission and successive federal treasurers have pointed to weak productivity growth as one of the economy’s structural weaknesses, and the government has openly framed AI adoption as part of the fix. Yet uptake among SMEs remains patchy — many lack the time, budget or in-house expertise to experiment. Tools that embed AI inside software businesses already use, and that target a chore every operator recognises, are far more likely to drive real adoption than standalone AI products that demand new workflows.
There is a compliance dividend too. The ATO has been sharpening its focus on the small-business tax gap, and better-coded, better-documented books mean fewer errors, cleaner BAS lodgements and less exposure at audit. If AImeaningfully lifts the baseline quality of SME record-keeping, the benefit flows well beyond any single vendor’s customer base. The flip side is a widening capability gap between businesses that adopt these tools and those that do not — a divide policymakers focused on digital inclusion will need to watch.
What’s next
The real test will be accuracy at scale and whether Budgetly can convince accountants — the gatekeepers who often choose the software their clients run — that the AI is an ally rather than a risk. Expect competitors to match the feature set quickly, which will push the contest toward integration depth, pricing and trust. For Australian SMEs, the near-term takeaway is more modest but genuinely useful: the month-end grind is finally getting some automated help, provided someone still checks the machine’s homework.
Sources: IT Brief Australia


















































