30 European countries, 30+ live accounting connectors, and a longer radar of platforms we are tracking next. This is what European accounting connectivity looks like from our side of the API, country by country.
Last updated
01
Europe is not a single accounting market. It is dozens of local ecosystems, each with its own software champions, professional standards, and regulatory pace. Independent research by Flagship Advisory Partners mapped 100+ accounting platforms across 10 European markets, and Eurostat shows ERP adoption ranging from 66% of enterprises in Denmark to 22% in Croatia โ there is no single pan-European norm.
What that looks like from our side: Apideck currently runs live accounting connectors in 30 European countries, with 30 live connectors and 1 additional platforms on the public roadmap. The Netherlands alone has 14 live connectors and 24 platforms on the radar, including Exact Globe, Exact Globe Next, AccountView, Multivers, Visma.Net, and the upcoming SnelStart integration.
A single โEuropean accounting integrationโ is really a series of separate country-level integration projects. Country-by-country coverage is the only honest unit of measurement.
02
Integration has moved from a nice-to-have to a deciding factor in how businesses pick software. In Gartner Digital Markets' 2024 global software-buying survey (n=2,499), buyers named a vendor's ability to provide integration support (44%) as their top concern when evaluating providers. And Capterra found 44% of accounting-software buyers struggle to find software that fits their existing tech stack โ seven points above the all-category average.
What we see on the Apideck side matches that demand signal. โDo you support platform X in country Yโ is the qualifying question on day one of a fintech procurement cycle, not a roadmap conversation in month six. Buyers no longer pick one accounting integration. They pick a region.
That is why a unified API matters more than a long list of connectors: normalized data, shared auth, and shared webhooks mean one schema across DATEV, Exact, Fortnox, and TeamSystem collapses the procurement question from twenty conversations to one.
03
Fragmentation has a measurable cost. Ardent Partners' 2024 ePayables study found the average business spends $9.40 to process a single invoice and 9.2 days to turn it around, while highly automated teams spend $2.78 and 3.1 days โ and only about a third of B2B invoices process straight through without manual intervention. APQC's benchmarks show the same spread, from $1.77 per invoice for top performers to $10.89 for the rest.
The point for builders: Apideck's accounting unified API normalizes data across all live European connectors behind a single schema. The time buyers lose on data entry translates, on the vendor side, into shorter onboarding, fewer support tickets, and less per-customer integration work for product teams. Coverage without normalization only shifts the work. The integration layer has to do both.
04
AI agents in finance are only as good as the data they can reach. In KPMG's 2026 Global AI in Finance report, more finance leaders named data quality, integration and interoperability as their single biggest opportunity to get more value from AI than any other factor โ and the same issue ranked among their top vulnerabilities. Without reliable integrations, agent outputs stay incomplete and automation breaks down.
Apideck ships a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for every unified API, including Accounting. AI agents call the structured-data layer directly rather than parsing raw connector APIs. The unified schema is what makes agent workflows run across DATEV, Exact, Xero, and TeamSystem without per-connector glue code. AI agents that need accounting data in Europe are not asking โcan we connect to QuickBooks.โ They are asking โcan we connect to DATEV in Germany, Fortnox in Sweden, Exact in the Netherlands, and TeamSystem in Italy under one schema.โ
The accounting integration map is one slice of a bigger picture. Our State of Embedded Finance 2026 maps the full fintech infrastructure stack across 72 companies, 189 vendors, and 12 categories, including how the accounting layer connects to payments, lending, BaaS, and KYC.
05
Each European market has its own dominant local platform: DATEV in Germany, Fortnox in Sweden, Exact in the Netherlands, TeamSystem in Italy, and Sage variants across France and Iberia, with distribution often running through accountants rather than the platforms themselves. This is a well-documented feature of the European landscape and one our own coverage data reflects directly.
| Market | Local champion | Apideck status |
|---|---|---|
| Germany | DATEV | Live |
| Sweden | Fortnox | Live |
| Netherlands | Exact Online | Live |
| Netherlands | SnelStart | On roadmap |
| Italy | TeamSystem | On roadmap |
| Finland | Procountor | Live |
| Belgium | Odoo | Live |
| Belgium | AFAS | Live |
| France | Sage | Live |
| UK | Xero | Live |
A pan-European integration strategy without DATEV, Fortnox, Exact, and TeamSystem is not pan-European. Long-tail coverage is where build-versus-buy math breaks decisively in favour of buy.
See full country-by-country status on the European accounting coverage page.
06
The e-invoicing wave is pulling every accounting platform in Europe into the compliance perimeter. VAT in the Digital Age (ViDA) entered into force in April 2025, and cross-border B2B e-invoicing becomes mandatory across the EU on 1 July 2030 (EU Council, April 2025). The country-level mandates run well ahead of that:
Five concurrent timelines, five formats (KSeF, Chorus Pro, FatturaPA, Peppol BIS variants), and customer onboarding still has to land in days, not months. On our side, the work is country-specific connector coverage plus format normalization behind one schema. The Apideck Accounting unified API absorbs the variance so a product team building once ships against all five mandates instead of five separate integration projects.
07
The capital flowing into European accounting tech is concentrating, not splintering, and it is backing the players that sell through accountants. Pennylane raised $204M Series E in January 2026 at a reported $4.25B valuation, led by TCV with CapitalG, Blackstone, Sequoia, and DST (Pennylane, January 2026). It tripled corporate customers in 2025, claims 800,000 SMEs and 6,000 partner accounting firms, hit roughly โฌ115M ARR, launched in Germany in November 2025, and plans a third country in H2 2026. The European accounting software market reached about $5.35 billion in 2024 and is growing around 8 percent a year (Grand View Research).
Cegid is the consolidator: 28 acquisitions to date, including Shine in November 2025, sevDesk earlier in 2025, and PHC and EBP before that, positioning publicly as โEurope's financial copilot for SMBs and accountants.โ The old guard (Sage, Visma, Exact, DATEV, Wolters Kluwer) is mostly responding with AI bolt-ons and channel defence.
The pattern is consistent: sell through the accounting firm, not around it. That is why Xero and QuickBooks struggle to take continental share despite global scale, and why the capital flowing into Pennylane and Cegid is buying the same channel from two directions. For the full vendor map beyond Europe, see the global accounting radar.
08
Deloitte's Finance Trends 2026 found 63 percent of finance teams have fully deployed and actively use AI, though only 14 percent run fully integrated AI agents. A separate Wolters Kluwer survey found 6 percent of finance leaders use agentic AI today, with 44 percent expecting to within a year.
On one side, embedded copilots: Pennylane, Sage Pulse, Cegid's 2026 smart actions across accounting, payroll, and compliance. AI lives inside the existing UI and the accountant stays in the seat. On the other, autonomous agents: Digits, Pilot's โautonomous AI accountantโ announced February 2026, Vic.ai on accounts payable. Agents act, the human reviews. The EU AI Act's full enforcement window opens 2 August 2026, which will shape how aggressive autonomous agents can get in production, especially anywhere they touch VAT submissions or statutory filings.
Both stacks assume clean structured data flowing in. The agent split changes who clicks the button and what regulators allow it to do. It does not change the underlying integration problem, and Apideck's unified accounting schema is the same answer either way.
Coverage map
Live connectors and roadmap status for every European country. Markets we have not opened yet are shown as upcoming.
Netherlands
United Kingdom
Belgium
Germany
Luxembourg
Norway
Sweden
Cyprus
France
Malta
Spain
Austria
Bulgaria
Croatia
Czech Republic
Denmark
Estonia
Finland
Greece
Hungary
Ireland
Italy
Latvia
Lithuania
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Slovakia
Slovenia
Switzerland
The European accounting roadmap, pulled directly from the live connector list:
Each entry closes a documented gap against a local champion. Roadmap status is updated continuously at /integrations/accounting-coverage.
Pick a country. See live coverage, roadmap status, and what is on the radar. Talk to us if your roadmap depends on a platform that is not live yet.