Disclosure: TaxMatch is built by JMS Dev Lab, the publisher of this blog. We're upfront about that throughout and honest about where the other tools are stronger.
A2X has been the default ecommerce-to-accounting bridge for so long that "use A2X" is the reflex answer in most accountant Slack channels. There is good reason for that reputation: settlements net out fees and refunds correctly, the journal entries are audit-ready, and the integrations with Xero and QuickBooks have been hardened over many years. Accountants like A2X because A2X makes the books defensible.
TaxMatch is built for the seller, not the accountant. If you are the one running your own books — or if you are paying a CPA only at year-end and want a clean number to hand them — A2X may be doing more than you need, at a price tuned for accounting firms rather than for a single Shopify seller. This post is the honest comparison.
A2X. The longest-running ecommerce-to-accounting bridge. It pulls settlement-level summaries from Shopify (and Amazon, Etsy, eBay, Walmart) and posts journal entries to Xero or QuickBooks. Settlements correctly net out fees and refunds. The "Gold Standard" framing is real — accountant firms onboard their entire client books to A2X and resell it. That distribution is part of what you are paying for.
TaxMatch. A 1099-K reconciliation tool. The job is narrower: take the 1099-K each payment processor sent you, take your Shopify order data for the same period, and produce a reconciliation report that explains the gap. Refunds, processor fees, sales tax collected on behalf of states, chargebacks — all reconciled. The output is a report you can hand to a CPA or attach to your own filing.
| Feature | TaxMatch | A2X |
|---|---|---|
| Primary use case | 1099-K reconciliation against Shopify revenue | Settlement-level journal entries to QBO/Xero |
| Buyer | The seller | The accountant (in most cases) |
| Pricing model | Flat tiers tuned for solo sellers | Per-channel tiers; multi-channel sellers pay more |
| Setup | Self-serve, designed for non-accountants | Self-serve possible, but most onboardings are accountant-led |
| Multi-processor reconciliation | Native — Shopify Payments + PayPal + Amazon Pay reconciled together | Per-channel; you may need separate A2X subscriptions |
| 1099-K-specific workflow | Yes — built around the form | No — settlement-summary based |
| Accounting-system journal entries | Export to CSV / PDF, hand to CPA | Posts directly into Xero / QBO |
If your accountant already uses A2X, do not switch. The Gold Standard reputation is earned. The settlement-summary journal entries are clean. The audit trail is well understood. Switching costs are real, and the savings are unlikely to be worth the disruption — particularly if your accountant charges by the hour to learn a new tool.
If your business spans multiple sales channels and the bookkeeping operation is the bottleneck (rather than tax-time reconciliation), A2X is the broader fit. They have spent years on the edges that come up when you sell on Amazon, Etsy, and Shopify simultaneously.
If you are a solo Shopify seller filing your own taxes — or asking a CPA to bless a single number at year-end — A2X's per-channel pricing and accountant-onboarding model is overkill. TaxMatch starts cheaper, sets up in minutes, and is designed for the workflow where you (the seller) own the books.
If your headache is specifically the 1099-K — the gap between what the form says you collected and what your Shopify revenue actually was — TaxMatch is built for that gap. A2X's settlement summaries and the 1099-K both correctly net out fees, but reconciling them to each other is not a workflow A2X was designed for. TaxMatch was.
If you have multiple payment processors plumbed into one Shopify store, the cross-processor reconciliation is where A2X's per-channel pricing becomes painful. TaxMatch reconciles them in one report at one price.
A2X has been around longer and has more accountants in its corner. If you ever want to hand the books to a firm, "I use A2X" is a shorter conversation than "I use TaxMatch." That is the price of being newer. We are working through it the slow way: by being genuinely better at the seller-owned 1099-K workflow.
A2X also posts journal entries to Xero / QuickBooks directly. TaxMatch does not — we export reports. If you need direct posting, A2X is the closer fit and will remain so for some time.
If your books are run by an accountant who wants journal entries: A2X. If you run your own books and your hard problem is reconciling 1099-Ks against Shopify: TaxMatch. If you sell on multiple channels and the bookkeeping is the daily work: A2X. If you sell on Shopify with multiple processors and the tax-time reconciliation is the year-end pain: TaxMatch.
Related reading: TaxMatch vs Link My Books · Best 1099-K Reconciliation Tools for Shopify Sellers · Shopify 1099-K: What Every Seller Needs to Know · TaxMatch.