Skip to content
Comparison · Pronto Xi

OpsUI vs Pronto Xi

A modular cloud operations layer versus Australia's flagship integrated ERP.

In one line

OpsUI is a modular, cloud operations layer you switch on a module at a time and run alongside your existing ledger; Pronto Xi is a deep, single-vendor Australian ERP you implement as one integrated system, which is its strength and the reason it is a bigger commitment.

Pronto Xi is one of the most established names in Australian ERP. Built by Pronto Software, an Australian-owned company with decades in the market, it is a genuinely deep, fully integrated system — finance, distribution, manufacturing, warehousing, retail POS, business intelligence and CRM under one roof, from one vendor, often with a deployment that leans on-premise or to a hosted private cloud.

If you are searching for Pronto Xi alternatives in Australia, it is usually for one of a few reasons: the integration effort to bolt on the pieces you need feels heavier than expected, the upgrade and customisation cost adds up over the years, or the interface and workflow feel dated next to modern cloud tools your team uses everywhere else. Those are real, commonly cited frustrations — but they are the trade-offs of a deep, do-everything platform, not flaws unique to Pronto.

The honest framing is that these tools are not the same shape of purchase. Pronto Xi is a monolithic, deeply integrated ERP you implement as a project and run as your single source of truth. OpsUI is a modular operations layer you buy a la carte, stand up in weeks, and run on top of the finance system you already have — Xero, MYOB or NetSuite — rather than replacing it.

So the real question is rarely 'which ERP is better'. It is whether you want one deep integrated Australian ERP that owns everything from the ledger to the loading dock, or a lighter cloud ops layer that fixes the warehouse, inventory, orders, shipping and CRM while leaving your finance system exactly where it works. This page lays out both fairly, including when Pronto Xi is the better answer.

Side by side

OpsUI vs Pronto Xi, feature by feature.

OpsUIPronto Xi
Pricing modelFlat, modular and public. Modules from A$399/module/month; starter packs from A$1,499/month (5 users included); additional users A$99/month; Enterprise (all modules, unlimited users) custom-quoted. AUD-billed. Full breakdown at /pricing.Quote-only, scoped with Pronto Software or a partner. Licensing reflects modules, users and deployment model, plus implementation and ongoing support — normal for a deep integrated ERP, but not a self-serve monthly switch-on.
ScopeOperations layer: warehouse, inventory, orders, shipping, CRM and the surrounding ops modules. Deliberately not a general ledger.Full integrated ERP: general ledger, AP/AR, distribution, manufacturing, warehousing, retail POS, BI and CRM in one platform.
ArchitectureCloud-native, modular, a la carte. Switch on only the modules you need; add more later without re-implementing.Single, deeply integrated platform designed to work as one system. Depth and coupling are the point; modules assume the same backbone.
DeploymentCloud SaaS at opsui.au, with Australian-hosted production data and AU business-hours support.Flexible but often on-premise-leaning or hosted private cloud, which suits some operators and means more infrastructure to own for others.
Finance systemKeep your ledger. Runs alongside Xero, MYOB or NetSuite rather than replacing it — no forced ledger migration to fix operations.Pronto Xi is the ledger. Adopting it means moving finance onto Pronto, since the integrated finance core is central to the platform's value.
Time to valueWeeks. Scope the modules, connect the integrations, go live incrementally.A full ERP project: discovery, data migration, configuration, training and go-live, typically measured in months.
Adoption pathIncremental. Start with one or two modules where the pain is sharpest, expand as it earns trust.Re-implementation. The value comes from running the integrated suite, so adoption is a larger, more all-at-once commitment.
User experienceModern cloud UI built for browser and warehouse-floor use, with frequent rolling updates.Capable and dense, with deep functionality; some operators find the interface dated next to newer cloud tools, which is the trade-off of long-lived breadth.
UpgradesContinuous SaaS delivery; new versions arrive automatically with no upgrade project.Versioned upgrades that can become projects in their own right, especially where the system has been heavily customised — a known cost to plan for.
Australian fitANZ-built and AU-hosted, AUD-billed, with NetSuite sync live and Xero/MYOB sync wired during rollout.Australian-made and Australian-owned, with strong local support and a long track record across AU industries — a genuine strength for buyers who value local provenance.
CustomisationConfigured through a business-rules engine and module settings; deep bespoke change is not the model.Highly customisable to fit specific processes — powerful for complex operations, though customisation is also what drives long-term maintenance and upgrade cost.
Honest pick

When Pronto Xi is the better fit

  • You genuinely want one deep, integrated Australian ERP that owns everything from the general ledger to manufacturing to the loading dock, and you have the budget and appetite for the implementation that requires. That is exactly what Pronto Xi is built to be, and pretending a lighter ops layer can replace it would be the kind of marketing fluff we refuse to write.
  • Your finance is the thing you have outgrown, not just your operations. If you need a full ledger, AP/AR, multi-entity finance and manufacturing accounting in one connected system, Pronto Xi gives you that depth under a single vendor — and adding an ops layer to a stretched accounting tool would not solve it.
  • You run complex manufacturing or distribution that benefits from tight, native coupling between production, inventory, costing and finance. Pronto Xi's integrated depth and heavy customisability are real advantages when your processes are intricate and specific.
  • Local provenance and a long-standing support relationship matter to you. Pronto Software is Australian-owned with a decades-long track record and an established partner and support network across AU industries — a legitimate reason to choose it on its own terms.
Where OpsUI shines

When OpsUI is the better fit

  • Your finance system already works and the real pain is operational. If Xero, MYOB or NetSuite closes the month without drama and the mess is in the warehouse — stock accuracy, picking errors, where-is-my-order, receiving chaos, returns no one can trace — then a full Pronto re-implementation fixes the part that is not broken and leaves the part that is.
  • You want to keep your ledger and add operations on top, not migrate finance to solve a warehouse problem. OpsUI is designed to run alongside your existing finance system, so your accountant's workflow and your finance data stay put.
  • You want public, predictable pricing and a deployment measured in weeks. OpsUI publishes flat modular rates and you switch on modules incrementally, rather than committing to a quote-led project up front — full breakdown at /pricing.
  • You want a modern cloud UI and continuous updates with no upgrade projects. If a dated interface or recurring upgrade and customisation cost is part of what is pushing you to look at alternatives, a continuously delivered SaaS ops layer addresses that directly.
  • You want to start small and prove value before expanding. With a la carte modules you can begin with order-management, inventory-management, receiving-inbound and shipping-outbound, then add more as it earns trust — no all-at-once monolithic commitment.
ANZ context

Both are built for the ANZ market, which is part of why this comparison comes up so often. Pronto Xi's pull is its Australian provenance — Australian-made, Australian-owned, with a long local track record. OpsUI's pull is a different one: an AU-hosted, AUD-billed cloud ops layer with engineering in ANZ that lets you add operations without disturbing your ledger. On the integration side OpsUI is plain about status — bidirectional NetSuite sync is live in production today, while Xero and MYOB sync is wired during rollout through the finance-accounting module. On shipping, NZ Couriers is the one live carrier API today; Australian carriers (Australia Post, StarTrack, Sendle, Toll, DHL, Aramex, CouriersPlease and the Shippit aggregator) are wired during rollout — direct API, aggregator or file-based, confirmed during scoping. See /integrations for what connects today versus during rollout, stated without roadmap logos pretending to be live features.

Common questions

What buyers ask before choosing.

What are the main Pronto Xi alternatives in Australia?
It depends on what you are actually replacing. If you need a deep, fully integrated Australian ERP, the genuine peers are other mid-market and enterprise ERPs such as NetSuite, Microsoft Dynamics 365, SAP and MYOB Acumatica — comparable scope and comparable implementation effort. If the gap is operations rather than finance, the lighter alternative is a modular operations layer like OpsUI that runs the warehouse, inventory, orders, shipping and CRM on top of the finance system you already have, rather than replacing your ledger.
Is OpsUI a replacement for Pronto Xi?
Not a like-for-like one. Pronto Xi is a full integrated ERP including the general ledger and manufacturing accounting; OpsUI is an operations layer and is deliberately not a ledger. If your finance core is the thing you have outgrown, OpsUI is not the answer — a full ERP comparison is. If your finance works and the pain is operational, OpsUI replaces the warehouse and order-flow part of the problem without you migrating finance at all.
Do I have to migrate my accounting system to use OpsUI?
No. OpsUI is built to run alongside your existing ledger — Xero, MYOB or NetSuite — rather than replacing it. Bidirectional NetSuite sync is live in production today, and Xero and MYOB sync is wired during rollout via the finance-accounting module. Adopting Pronto Xi, by contrast, generally means moving finance onto Pronto, because the integrated finance core is central to how the platform delivers value.
How does pricing compare between OpsUI and Pronto Xi?
They use different pricing models, so a like-for-like dollar comparison is not meaningful. OpsUI publishes flat modular pricing — modules from A$399/module/month, with public per-module and per-user rates and a custom-quoted Enterprise tier; the full breakdown is at /pricing. Pronto Xi is quote-only, scoped with the vendor or a partner to reflect modules, users, deployment and implementation, which is normal for a deep integrated ERP. If public, predictable pricing is one of your reasons for looking, that difference is the substance of it.
When should I stay with Pronto Xi instead of switching?
If you genuinely want one deep, integrated Australian ERP that owns finance through manufacturing through the warehouse, and you have the budget and appetite for it, Pronto Xi is doing exactly what it is built to do and a lighter ops layer will not match that depth. The case for an alternative gets strong when your finance already works and the real mess is operational — at that point migrating to or staying on a full ERP to fix the warehouse solves a problem you may not have.

Last updated

Compare another

Other ANZ ERP comparisons.

vs NetSuite
OpsUI vs NetSuite
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM for ANZ versus the global suite default
vs NetSuite
NetSuite alternatives for NZ & AU operations
A practical guide for ANZ operators evaluating ERP options outside NetSuite
vs Cin7
OpsUI vs Cin7 Core
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus an inventory-led platform
vs Unleashed
OpsUI vs Unleashed
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus an inventory layer above Xero
vs Xero
Beyond Xero: adding a real operations layer
When you have outgrown spreadsheets-plus-Xero and need ERP, WMS or CRM
vs MYOB
Beyond MYOB: scaling past accounting into operations
When MYOB AccountRight or Business handles the books but operations need their own system
vs SAP Business One
OpsUI vs SAP Business One
Modular ANZ-built ERP versus a partner-implemented SMB suite
vs Dynamics 365 BC
OpsUI vs Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central
Modular ANZ-built ERP versus a Microsoft-ecosystem SMB suite
vs Cin7 Core
OpsUI vs Cin7 Core (formerly DEAR)
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus a Xero-attached inventory and light-manufacturing platform
vs Katana
OpsUI vs Katana
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus a manufacturing-led inventory and light-MRP platform
vs MYOB Acumatica
OpsUI vs MYOB Acumatica (formerly MYOB Advanced)
Modular ANZ-built ERP versus a partner-implemented mid-market suite
vs Odoo
OpsUI vs Odoo
Modular ANZ-built ERP versus an open-source global ERP suite
vs Cin7 / Unleashed
Cin7 vs Unleashed vs OpsUI
A neutral three-way look at Cin7 (Core/Omni), Unleashed and OpsUI for Australian inventory and operations.
vs Neto
OpsUI vs Neto (Maropost Commerce Cloud)
Looking for a Neto alternative in Australia? Keep your finance system, add a dedicated operations layer.
vs CartonCloud
OpsUI vs CartonCloud
Modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus a 3PL and transport-first warehouse system
vs Datapel
OpsUI vs Datapel WMS
Two MYOB/Xero-native warehouse layers, compared honestly for Australian operations teams.
vs Wiise
OpsUI vs Wiise
A full Microsoft Business Central ERP versus a lightweight modular ops layer that keeps your ledger.
vs Cin7 Omni
OpsUI vs Cin7 Omni
A transparent, modular operations layer versus a broad quote-priced multichannel and 3PL platform
vs Fishbowl
OpsUI vs Fishbowl
Cloud-native modular ERP, WMS & CRM versus a QuickBooks-tied inventory and manufacturing platform with on-prem heritage
vs Microlistics / Mintsoft
OpsUI vs Microlistics & Mintsoft
A lighter, finance-agnostic 3PL ops layer versus two established Australian warehouse platforms.
vs MRPeasy
OpsUI vs MRPeasy
Cloud MRP for small makers versus a modular ERP, WMS and MRP layer for operators outgrowing per-user pricing.

See the modules. Decide for yourself.

Public pricing on the page. No discovery call required to know what OpsUI costs.