Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Omniga is a “done-for-you” bookkeeping and monthly close service for digital startups. It does not try to replace QuickBooks Online; instead, it adds a workflow layer on top of an existing stack such as QBO, banks, Stripe, Shopify, Ramp, Brex, and payroll tools: rules, review, reconciliation, evidence, approvals, and monthly close deliverables. Its core promise is to deliver a monthly close package by the 10th business day of each month.
Its focus is not simply automated posting, but “automation + human judgment.” The workflow includes a two-week kickoff, chart of accounts setup, account connections, transaction categorization, bank and credit card reconciliation, payment platform reconciliation, subscription revenue recognition, exception flagging, workpapers, and financial statement output. For internal controls, it provides review thresholds, period locks, approval gates, exception routing, change logs, and audit trails. Each journal entry can be traced back to its source, rule/reason, reviewer, and approval record, making it suitable for teams that care about the reliability of the monthly close and audit readiness.
Pricing is fairly transparent: $300/month for annual revenue under $1.5M, $500/month under $3M, $1000/month under $10M, and custom pricing for over $10M or historical cleanup. Billing is monthly, with no long-term contract, and can be canceled; the two-week onboarding is included. However, historical cleanup may incur extra fees. It explicitly does not include tax filing, FP&A, budgeting, accounts payable payment execution, accounts receivable collections, payroll processing, or full inventory/COGS management.
The advantages are clear pricing, customer ownership of the QBO file, no migration required, a well-defined human review process, and a relatively complete audit evidence chain. The downsides are that the scope is focused on bookkeeping, so strategic finance and tax work require external partners; SOC 2 Type II is still shown as in progress; and API or developer support is not disclosed. It is best suited to SaaS companies, subscription businesses, multi-channel ecommerce companies, and U.S.-style digital startups using Stripe/Shopify/Ramp.
The site does not state details on website access, payment methods, or availability from Chinese networks, so these remain unknown. If a Chinese company mainly uses local banks, tax-control systems, fapiao invoicing, and social insurance systems, Omniga’s fit with QBO and overseas payment stacks may be limited. Comparable options include Bench, Pilot, Botkeeper, and QuickBooks Live; for China-specific scenarios, consider Yonyou, Kingdee, Chanjet, and local bookkeeping agencies.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on omniga.ai official site.
omniga.ai is an Unknown Legal & Tax provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach omniga.ai directly.