Also analyzed in: 7 other industries
Analyzed: 2026-04-22
Model: OpenAI GPT-5
Prompts run:
Total responses:
Overall AI Visibility?
92
/ 100
Dominant

Geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Penalises any single weak metric.

Latent Brand Association?
78
/ 100
Product-Strong

What the model believes about Gusto without web search.

LLM Authority?
100
/ 100
Dominant

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts.

Top of Mind?
100
/ 100
Category Ruler

Unprompted recall on high-volume discovery prompts.

Metric 1 of 3 Latent Brand Association?

Measures what GPT-5 believes about Gusto from training alone, before any web search. We probe the model 5 times across 5 different angles and score 5 sub-signals.

LBA Score
78/100
Product-Strong
Quality?
0.69
Meta-factor?
1.00
Familiarity?
0.74
Top associations for Gusto
small business focus 4 HR software 3 popular with startups 3 strong payroll automation 3 midsize business focus 2 strong payroll automation 2 all-in-one HR features 2 good for small businesses 2 benefits administration 2 all-in-one small-business HR 2 mid-sized business focus 2 can get expensive 2 payroll software 2 benefits and onboarding support 2 HR software 2
Control prompt (category baseline)
supports direct deposits 2 handles tax calculations 2 payroll reporting features 1 offers basic compliance reporting 1 provides payroll reporting 1 supports payroll compliance 1 runs direct deposits 1 handles deductions 1 calculates wages and taxes 1 automates employee pay processing 1

High overlap with brand prompts shows Gusto is firmly in the model's "payroll platform" category.

Sample model responses
Prompt: What is Gusto known for?

Gusto is known for its payroll, benefits, and HR software for small and mid-sized businesses.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What is Gusto known for?

Gusto is best known for its payroll, HR, and employee benefits software for small and midsize businesses.

Iteration: 2 of 5

Metric 2 of 3 LLM Authority?

Frequency × prominence across organic category prompts where users ask category questions and AI recommends brands. Measured both with and without web search, then averaged 50/50.

Authority Score
100/100
Dominant
Recall mode (no web)?
100

What the model recalls from training without searching the web.

Retrieval mode (with web)?
100

What the model returns when it can search live web sources.

IntentPromptRecall pos.Retrieval pos.
discovery What are the best payroll platforms for small business owners? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms work well for restaurants? #5 #5
discovery What payroll platforms are good for healthcare practices? #3 #4
discovery What are the best payroll platforms for nonprofits? #1 #2
discovery Which payroll platforms are best for construction companies? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What payroll platforms are best for restaurants with tipped employees? #2 #5
discovery What payroll platforms are best for accounting firms managing clients? #3 #1
discovery What payroll platforms support contractors and employees? #1 #1
discovery What are the best payroll platforms for hourly and salaried staff? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms are good for seasonal businesses? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms are best for remote-first companies? #6 #5
discovery What payroll platforms are best for businesses with multiple locations? #3 #5
discovery What payroll platforms are best for international teams? not mentioned not mentioned
discovery What payroll platforms are easiest to set up? #1 #3
discovery What payroll platforms have strong tax filing support? #1 #3
discovery What payroll platforms include direct deposit? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms integrate with accounting software? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms are best for benefits and payroll together? #1 #2
discovery What payroll platforms are best for growing companies? #1 #1
discovery What payroll platforms are best for budget-conscious businesses? #2 #4
comparison What are the best alternatives to leading payroll platform options? #1 #2
comparison What are the best payroll platform alternatives for small businesses? #1 #8
comparison How do payroll platform options compare for pricing? #1 #2
comparison Which payroll platforms are better for startups vs established companies? #1 #1
comparison What payroll platforms are best alternatives for remote teams? #6 #6
comparison What payroll platforms are best alternatives for contractor-heavy businesses? #1 #1
comparison What payroll platform options are better for multi-state payroll? #2 #2
comparison Which payroll platforms are best alternatives for international payroll needs? not mentioned not mentioned
comparison What are the best payroll platforms compared by ease of use? #1 #1
comparison What payroll platforms are best alternatives for companies that need HR features too? #1 #2
problem How do I fix payroll tax filing errors in a payroll platform? #1 #1
problem How do I run payroll for hourly employees? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I set up direct deposit for employees? #1 #2
problem How do I handle payroll for contractors and employees? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I manage payroll tax withholdings for multiple states? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I automate payroll for a small business? #1 #1
problem How do I avoid payroll mistakes when processing paychecks? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I track PTO in a payroll platform? #1 #1
problem How do I pay salaried employees accurately each cycle? #1 not mentioned
problem How do I correct a missed payroll deposit? #2 not mentioned
transactional How much does a payroll platform cost per employee? #1 #1
transactional What is the cheapest payroll platform for small businesses? #4 #3
transactional Is there a free payroll platform for small businesses? not mentioned #1
transactional What payroll platforms have free trials? #5 #5
transactional What payroll platforms have transparent pricing? #1 #1
transactional What payroll platforms are best value for the money? #1 #1
transactional How much is payroll software for a small team? #1 #1
transactional What payroll platforms charge per payroll run? not mentioned #1
transactional What payroll platforms include tax filing in the price? #1 #1
transactional What payroll platforms are affordable for startups? #1 #5
Sample responses
Prompt: What are the best payroll platforms for small business owners? · discovery · recall mode

For most small business owners, the best payroll platforms are:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for small businesses. Easy setup, excellent UI, strong automated tax filing, and solid HR add-ons.

  1. ADP Run

Best for growing businesses that want a more established payroll provider. Very reliable, lots of features, but can feel pricier.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks Online. Very convenient for accounting + payroll in one place.

  1. Rippling

Best for companies that want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system. Powerful, but more than some tiny businesses need.

  1. OnPay

Best value for smaller teams. Simple, affordable, and good for restaurants, nonprofits, and businesses with mixed employee types.

  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that want flexible payroll with lots of support options. Good middle ground between simple and full-service.

My quick picks
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best low-cost option: OnPay
  • Best for scaling: Rippling or ADP Run

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for 1–10 employees.

Prompt: What are the best payroll platforms for small business owners? · discovery · retrieval mode

Here are my top picks for small business payroll, depending on what you value most:

  • Best overall: Gusto — clean UI, full-service payroll, tax filings, benefits/HR add-ons, and transparent pricing starting at $49/month + $6/person on the Simple plan. (gusto.com)
  • Best value: OnPay — simple, no-quote pricing and strong support; OnPay says pricing is straightforward and starts at $55/month. (onpay.com)
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting; pricing is $50/$88/$134 per month + per-employee fees for Core/Premium/Elite, and it includes payroll tax filing. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Best for Square users / retail & restaurants: Square Payroll — flat pricing, no long-term commitments, and it supports both W-2s and 1099s; it starts at $35/month + $6/person. (squareup.com)
  • Best budget pick: Patriot Payroll — one of the cheapest options, with payroll charges of $4 (Basic) or $5 (Full Service) per worker paid during the month, plus a base fee. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Best for bigger HR needs: ADP RUN — more robust HR/payroll features and 24/7 customer service, but pricing is typically quote-based. (adp.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best payroll platform for your business type (solo, 1–5 employees, hourly staff, contractors, multi-state, etc.).

Metric 3 of 3 Top of Mind?

Unprompted recall on 15 high-volume discovery prompts, run 5 times each in pure recall mode (no web). Brands that surface here are baked into the model's training, not borrowed from live search.

TOM Score
100/100
Category Ruler
Discovery promptVolumeAppearedPositions (5 runs)
What are the best payroll platforms for small businesses? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the top payroll platforms for startups? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What payroll platform options are most recommended? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the most popular payroll platforms for companies? 0 5/5 3, 3, 2, 3, 3
What payroll platforms are best for growing businesses? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the leading payroll platforms right now? 0 5/5 1, 2, 2, 1, 2
Which payroll platforms are best for remote teams? 0 5/5 5, 4, 5, 4, 4
What are the best payroll platforms for employers? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What payroll platform should I use for my business? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best payroll platforms for US businesses? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best payroll platforms for contractors? 0 5/5 1, 1, 2, 1, 1
What are the best payroll platforms for multi-state payroll? 0 5/5 3, 3, 4, 3, 1
What are the best payroll platforms for hourly employees? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What are the best payroll platforms for small teams? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
What payroll platforms are worth considering? 0 5/5 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
Sample recall responses
Prompt: What are the best payroll platforms for small businesses? (no web search)

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  • Gusto — Best overall for most small businesses. Easy setup, great UI, strong benefits/HR add-ons, and solid customer support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks. Nice integration with accounting, automatic tax filing, and simple payroll runs.
  • Rippling — Best for growing businesses. Combines payroll, HR, IT, and device management in one platform.
  • ADP RUN — Best for reliability and compliance. Strong payroll features, tax support, and scalable as you grow.
  • OnPay — Best value. Straightforward pricing, good for multi-state payroll, and includes HR basics.
  • Patriot Payroll — Best budget option. Affordable, simple, and good for very small teams.
  • Paychex Flex — Best for businesses wanting more hands-on support and advanced HR options.

Quick picks:

  • Small team, easy-to-use: Gusto
  • Already using QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Fast-growing company: Rippling
  • Budget-conscious: Patriot Payroll or OnPay

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, number of employees, or whether you need contractor-only payroll.

Iteration: 1 of 5
Prompt: What are the best payroll platforms for small businesses? (no web search)

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for most small businesses. Easy to use, strong benefits/admin tools, and great employee self-service.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks. Solid payroll + accounting integration, easy tax filing, and familiar interface.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for growing small businesses that want a more established provider. Very reliable, with strong support and compliance features.

  1. Rippling

Best for companies that want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system. Powerful, but more feature-heavy.

  1. OnPay

Best value for small businesses. Simple pricing, good for restaurants, nonprofits, and businesses with hourly workers.

  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that want flexible service options and more hands-on support.

  1. Square Payroll

Best for retail, restaurants, and service businesses already using Square POS. Very straightforward setup.

Quick pick by business type
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for all-in-one HR: Rippling
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay
  • Best for POS users: Square Payroll

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for 1–10 employees.

Iteration: 2 of 5

What to do next Recommendations for Gusto

Generated automatically from gaps and weaknesses in the analysis above, ranked by potential impact on the AI Visibility Score.

Protect and reinforce your LBA

Your LBA is strong. Focus on maintaining authoritative coverage and ensuring new product launches get independent reviews within 12 months of release.

Maintain current LBA

Identify and shore up oscillating differentiators

Core TOM is strong. Watch for specific differentiators (slogans, signature products) that appear in only some iterations. Push those into training-data-crawled headlines.

Maintain / refine TOM

How is this calculated? Methodology

Every score on this page is reproducible. Below is exactly what we ran and how we computed each number.

Overall AI Visibility Score
Smoothed geometric mean of LBA, Authority and TOM. Authority and TOM are floored at LBA × 0.1 before the geometric mean (the same floor used in the per-metric cards above, so brand cards and the composite tell the same story). Formula: composite = ((LBA + 5)(Authority + 5)(TOM + 5))^(1/3) - 5. The floor keeps brands the model clearly recognises but doesn't yet recommend from collapsing to zero, while a single genuinely weak metric still pulls the composite down. Full methodology.
Latent Brand Association (LBA)
5 brand probes + 1 control prompt, each run 5 times in recall mode (no web search). LBA = quality × meta × stability × share × recognition × 100. Each sub-signal is on a 0-1 scale. Read the full LBA methodology →
LLM Authority
50 organic category prompts (discovery, comparison, problem and transactional intents), each run once in recall mode and once in retrieval mode. Score = frequency × log-decayed prominence × intent weight, then 50/50 averaged across the two modes. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full Authority methodology →
Top of Mind (TOM)
15 high-volume discovery prompts (sourced from Keywords Everywhere search-volume data), each run 5 times in pure recall mode (no web). Score = frequency × (0.5 + 0.5 × log-prominence), volume-weighted. Prompts are shared across all brands in the industry. Read the full TOM methodology →

Analysis run on April 22, 2026 at 8:04 PM

All 210 AI responses for Gusto

Click a prompt to expand its responses. 210 total responses across 72 prompts.

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6 prompts)

What is Gusto known for?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is known for its payroll, benefits, and HR software for small and mid-sized businesses.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is best known for its payroll, HR, and employee benefits software for small and midsize businesses.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is known for its payroll, benefits, and HR software for small and mid-sized businesses.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is known for its payroll, benefits, and HR software for small and mid-sized businesses.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is best known for its cloud-based payroll, benefits, and HR software for small and midsize businesses.

What are Gusto's main strengths and weaknesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto’s main strengths are its user-friendly interface, strong payroll automation, and all-in-one HR features for small and midsize businesses. It’s generally praised for easy setup, smooth employee onboarding, benefits administration, and responsive support. Its main weaknesses are that it can get expensive as you add features or employees, and it’s less suited to larger or more complex organizations that need advanced customization, international payroll, or highly specialized HR controls.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto’s main strengths are its ease of use, clean interface, strong payroll automation, and all-in-one small-business HR features like benefits, onboarding, and compliance support. It’s especially popular with startups and small teams because it’s simple to set up and manage.

Its main weaknesses are that it can get expensive as you add employees or advanced features, and it’s less customizable than larger enterprise HR/payroll systems. It also may not be the best fit for complex organizations with multi-state, international, or highly specialized payroll needs.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto’s main strengths are its easy-to-use interface, strong payroll automation, and all-in-one HR features for small businesses. It’s especially good for handling payroll, taxes, benefits, onboarding, and compliance in one place, with a generally friendly user experience and solid customer support.

Its main weaknesses are that it can get expensive as you add employees or features, and some advanced HR or reporting needs may be limited compared with larger enterprise systems. It’s also generally best suited to small and mid-sized businesses, so very large or highly complex organizations may outgrow it.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto’s main strengths are its easy-to-use interface, strong payroll automation, and all-in-one small-business HR features like benefits, onboarding, and compliance support. It’s especially popular with startups and small teams because it’s simple to set up and relatively intuitive.

Its main weaknesses are that it can get expensive as you add employees or advanced features, and it’s less suited to larger or more complex organizations. Some users also find its reporting and customization options more limited than enterprise-grade HR/payroll systems.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto’s main strengths are its user-friendly interface, strong payroll automation, and well-rounded small-business HR features like benefits, onboarding, and compliance help. It’s especially good for startups and SMBs that want an all-in-one, easy-to-use system.

Main weaknesses: it can get expensive as you add features or grow, it’s less suited to complex enterprise needs, and some advanced HR/payroll customization options are limited compared with larger platforms.

Who should use Gusto? Who should avoid it?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is best for small to mid-sized businesses that want payroll, tax filing, benefits, and basic HR in one simple system—especially startups and teams without a dedicated HR/payroll expert.

People should avoid it if they need highly customized enterprise HR workflows, very complex global payroll, or deep advanced reporting/integrations that larger platforms handle better. It may also be a poor fit for very large companies or businesses that need a highly specialized compliance setup.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is best for small to mid-sized businesses that want an easy, all-in-one payroll, benefits, and basic HR platform—especially startups, small teams, and owners who want something simple and user-friendly.

It’s less ideal for very large companies, organizations with complex payroll/HR needs, or businesses that need highly customized enterprise workflows, deep global payroll support, or advanced reporting/compliance controls.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is best for small to mid-sized businesses that want an easy all-in-one payroll, benefits, and HR tool—especially startups and companies without a dedicated HR/payroll team.

Who should use it:

  • Small businesses
  • Startups
  • Teams hiring W-2 employees and contractors
  • Owners who want simple payroll tax filing and benefits administration
  • Businesses in the U.S. that want a user-friendly setup

Who should avoid it:

  • Large enterprises with complex global payroll needs
  • Companies needing highly customized HR/payroll workflows
  • Businesses outside the U.S. (Gusto is mainly U.S.-focused)
  • Organizations that already have a full in-house HR/payroll system and don’t need an all-in-one platform
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is a good fit for small to mid-sized businesses that want an easy-to-use payroll, HR, and benefits platform—especially startups, service businesses, and teams without a full in-house HR/payroll staff.

Use Gusto if you:

  • Need simple payroll and tax filing
  • Want employee benefits administration in one place
  • Have a small team and value ease of use over advanced customization
  • Want a setup that’s friendly for non-experts

Avoid Gusto if you:

  • Need very complex enterprise payroll or HR workflows
  • Run a large organization with multiple layers of approvals and custom compliance needs
  • Need deep customization, advanced reporting, or specialized international payroll
  • Want the cheapest possible bare-bones payroll only, with minimal extras
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is a good fit for small to mid-sized businesses that want an easy payroll, benefits, and basic HR platform—especially startups, service businesses, and companies without a dedicated HR/payroll team. It’s also useful for teams that value a clean interface and automated tax filing.

You may want to avoid Gusto if you’re a very large enterprise, need highly complex payroll/HR workflows, or require deep customization, advanced workforce management, or specialized industry compliance features. It may also be less ideal if you only need a very bare-bones payroll tool and don’t want to pay for extra HR features.

How does Gusto compare to its main competitors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is generally strongest for small businesses that want an easy-to-use, modern payroll and HR platform.

Compared with main competitors:

  • ADP / Paychex: Gusto is simpler, more intuitive, and usually better for small teams; ADP and Paychex are broader and stronger for larger, more complex businesses, but can feel heavier and pricier.
  • Rippling: Rippling is more powerful for IT, device, and employee app management, and scales better for mid-market companies; Gusto is easier and more payroll-focused.
  • QuickBooks Payroll: Gusto is usually better for all-in-one HR/payroll UX and benefits; QuickBooks wins if you already live inside QuickBooks accounting.
  • Square Payroll: Gusto is more full-featured for HR and benefits; Square is simpler and often better for very small, hourly or retail/service businesses already using Square.

Overall: Gusto’s edge is ease of use, clean onboarding, and a strong balance of payroll, benefits, and basic HR. Its main downside is that it’s not as deep or customizable as enterprise-oriented competitors.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is generally strongest for small and midsize businesses that want an easy, modern payroll + HR tool with a friendly UI and quick setup.

Compared with main competitors:

  • ADP: far more enterprise-grade and scalable, but usually more complex and less intuitive than Gusto.
  • Paychex: similar payroll/HR space; often stronger for larger or more traditional businesses, while Gusto is simpler and better for SMB ease of use.
  • Rippling: broader and more powerful for IT + HR + payroll automation; Gusto is easier and often cheaper for basic needs, but less flexible.
  • Zenefits/triNet-type SMB HR platforms: Gusto is usually easier to use and better for payroll-first teams, though some rivals may offer deeper benefits or HR administration.
  • QuickBooks Payroll: good if you already use QuickBooks; Gusto typically feels more polished and HR-focused.

Bottom line: Gusto competes best on simplicity, UX, and SMB-friendly payroll/HR, while competitors tend to win on depth, enterprise features, or broader platform capabilities.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is generally seen as a small- to mid-sized business payroll and HR platform that’s easier to use than many competitors.

  • vs ADP / Paychex: Gusto is usually simpler, more modern, and easier to onboard. ADP and Paychex tend to be stronger for larger or more complex organizations, with deeper enterprise features and broader service options, but they can feel heavier and more expensive.
  • vs Rippling: Rippling is more powerful for companies that want one system for HR, IT, and device/app management. Gusto is typically easier and better for straightforward payroll/benefits needs, while Rippling is more flexible but can be more complex.
  • vs QuickBooks Payroll: Gusto often offers a better all-in-one HR experience and stronger benefits administration. QuickBooks Payroll is attractive for businesses already using QuickBooks and wanting tighter accounting integration.
  • vs Zenefits/Justworks: Gusto is usually praised for simplicity and payroll ease. Justworks can be better for PEO-style support and compliance, while Zenefits historically focused more on HR workflows.

Overall: Gusto’s main strengths are ease of use, clean design, and good payroll/benefits for SMBs. Its main tradeoff is less depth and scalability than enterprise-focused competitors.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is generally seen as a strong choice for small and midsize businesses that want payroll + benefits + basic HR in one easy-to-use platform.

Compared with main competitors:

  • ADP: More scalable and feature-rich for larger companies, but usually more complex and often pricier. Gusto is simpler and more SMB-friendly.
  • Paychex: Similar payroll/HR space, often stronger for businesses that want hands-on service and more traditional payroll support. Gusto usually feels easier and more modern.
  • Rippling: Much broader and more powerful for HR, IT, and device management. Rippling is better for fast-growing or more complex companies; Gusto is easier and often better for straightforward payroll needs.
  • QuickBooks Payroll: Convenient if you already use QuickBooks, but Gusto typically offers a better all-in-one HR/benefits experience and more polished user experience.
  • Justworks: More of an HR outsourcing/PEO model, which can simplify compliance and benefits but may be a bigger commitment. Gusto is usually more flexible and lighter-weight.

Bottom line: Gusto is best for companies that value simplicity, good UX, and integrated payroll/benefits. Competitors tend to win on depth, scale, or specialized services.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Gusto is generally strongest for small and midsize businesses that want easy payroll, benefits, and basic HR in one simple platform.

How it compares:

  • ADP / Paychex: more enterprise-grade and more customizable, but usually more complex and often pricier. Gusto is simpler and easier to use.
  • Rippling: broader and more powerful for companies that want HR + IT + device management + automation. Gusto is lighter and better for straightforward payroll/HR.
  • QuickBooks Payroll: good if you already use QuickBooks, but Gusto is usually better for employee experience and HR/benefits features.
  • Zenefits/Justworks: more focused on HR, benefits, and compliance. Gusto is often better for payroll simplicity; these can be stronger for PEO-style support or certain benefits needs.

Bottom line: Gusto is one of the best choices for ease of use and all-in-one payroll/HR for SMBs, while competitors win on depth, scale, or broader platform features.

What do people typically complain about with Gusto?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

People commonly complain about Gusto’s customer support speed, pricing increasing as they grow, and occasional issues with payroll/tax setup or integrations. Some also mention limited flexibility for more complex HR/payroll needs compared with larger enterprise systems.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Gusto can get pricey as you add employees or features, and that it’s not ideal for more complex payroll/HR needs. Common gripes include limited customization, occasional support delays, and some reporting or integration limitations compared with larger enterprise systems.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about Gusto’s customer support responsiveness, occasional payroll/tax glitches, pricing getting expensive as you add features/employees, and some limits in reporting or more advanced HR/admin workflows.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain about Gusto’s pricing, occasional payroll/tax filing hiccups, limited advanced HR features, and customer support response times. Some also mention reporting/customization limits and that it can feel less flexible for larger or more complex businesses.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

People typically complain that Gusto can get pricey as you add more employees or features, and that support can be slow or hard to reach during urgent payroll issues. Others mention occasional glitches, limited customization/reporting compared with bigger HR systems, and some state-specific payroll or benefits quirks that take extra setup or manual work.

What is a typical payroll platform known for? control
0/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical payroll platform is known for automating employee pay, tax calculations, direct deposits, and payroll reporting, while helping ensure compliance with labor and tax laws.

Iteration 2 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical payroll platform is known for automating employee pay runs, calculating taxes and deductions, handling direct deposits, and helping with payroll compliance and reporting.

Iteration 3 of 5 Not mentioned

A payroll platform is typically known for automating employee pay processing, including calculating wages, taxes, and deductions, running direct deposits, and handling payroll compliance and reporting.

Iteration 4 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical payroll platform is known for automating employee pay, tax calculations, direct deposits, and payroll compliance.

Iteration 5 of 5 Not mentioned

A typical payroll platform is known for automating employee pay runs, tax calculations and filings, direct deposits, pay stubs, and basic compliance/reporting.

Authority — LLM Authority (50 prompts)

What are the best payroll platforms for small business owners? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For most small business owners, the best payroll platforms are:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for small businesses. Easy setup, excellent UI, strong automated tax filing, and solid HR add-ons.

  1. ADP Run

Best for growing businesses that want a more established payroll provider. Very reliable, lots of features, but can feel pricier.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks Online. Very convenient for accounting + payroll in one place.

  1. Rippling

Best for companies that want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system. Powerful, but more than some tiny businesses need.

  1. OnPay

Best value for smaller teams. Simple, affordable, and good for restaurants, nonprofits, and businesses with mixed employee types.

  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that want flexible payroll with lots of support options. Good middle ground between simple and full-service.

My quick picks
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best low-cost option: OnPay
  • Best for scaling: Rippling or ADP Run

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for 1–10 employees.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are my top picks for small business payroll, depending on what you value most:

  • Best overall: Gusto — clean UI, full-service payroll, tax filings, benefits/HR add-ons, and transparent pricing starting at $49/month + $6/person on the Simple plan. (gusto.com)
  • Best value: OnPay — simple, no-quote pricing and strong support; OnPay says pricing is straightforward and starts at $55/month. (onpay.com)
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting; pricing is $50/$88/$134 per month + per-employee fees for Core/Premium/Elite, and it includes payroll tax filing. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Best for Square users / retail & restaurants: Square Payroll — flat pricing, no long-term commitments, and it supports both W-2s and 1099s; it starts at $35/month + $6/person. (squareup.com)
  • Best budget pick: Patriot Payroll — one of the cheapest options, with payroll charges of $4 (Basic) or $5 (Full Service) per worker paid during the month, plus a base fee. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Best for bigger HR needs: ADP RUN — more robust HR/payroll features and 24/7 customer service, but pricing is typically quote-based. (adp.com)

If you want, I can also narrow this down to the best payroll platform for your business type (solo, 1–5 employees, hourly staff, contractors, multi-state, etc.).

What payroll platforms work well for restaurants? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For restaurants, the best payroll platforms usually handle hourly staff, tip reporting, overtime, multiple locations, and scheduling/integrations well.

Good options:

  • Toast Payroll — Best if you already use Toast POS. Strong for restaurant workflows, tip distribution, and time tracking.
  • 7shifts Payroll — Great for restaurants that want scheduling + payroll in one place. Strong labor management.
  • ADP Run — Reliable, scalable, and good for multi-location restaurants, though less “restaurant-native.”
  • Paychex Flex — Solid payroll and HR features; good support for tipped employees.
  • Gusto — Easy to use and great for smaller restaurants, but not as deep on restaurant-specific labor features.
  • Square Payroll — Good for smaller restaurants using Square POS; simple and affordable.
  • Restaurant365 Payroll — Best for full back-office restaurant management if you use Restaurant365.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Best overall for restaurants: Toast Payroll
  • Best scheduling + payroll combo: 7shifts
  • Best simple option for small restaurants: Gusto or Square Payroll

If you want, I can narrow this down by your restaurant size, POS system, and whether you have tipped employees.

retrieval Mentioned

A few payroll platforms work especially well for restaurants:

  • Toast Payroll & Team Management — best if you already use Toast POS; it’s built for restaurant-specific needs like tips, overtime, and syncing hours from the POS. (pos.toasttab.com)
  • Square Payroll — a strong fit for Square-based restaurants; it supports importing tips and works with Square Shifts/timecards. (squareup.com)
  • Gusto — good for smaller restaurants that want simpler payroll with tipped-worker compliance and restaurant-oriented time tracking. (gusto.com)
  • 7shifts Payroll — best if you want scheduling + labor management + payroll in one restaurant-focused system. (7shifts.com)
  • ADP / Paychex — better for multi-location or more complex operations that need broader HR/payroll support and integrations for tip/overtime tracking. (apps.adp.com)

If you tell me your POS, number of locations, and whether you have tipped employees, I can narrow it to the best 2 options.

What payroll platforms are good for healthcare practices? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good payroll platforms for healthcare practices:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP RUN — strong compliance, tax filing, multi-location support, and solid reporting. Good for small to mid-size practices.
  • Paychex Flex — popular with medical and dental offices; good HR/payroll combo, easy benefits admin, and strong support.
  • Gusto — great for smaller practices that want something simple, modern, and easy to run for hourly staff.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + device/app management in one system; strong automation.
  • UKG Ready — good for larger clinics or practices with complex scheduling, time tracking, and shift-based teams.
  • BambooHR + payroll add-on — good for practices that care more about HR workflows and employee onboarding than deep payroll complexity.

If your practice has lots of hourly staff, overtime, shift differentials, or multiple locations, I’d look first at ADP, Paychex, or UKG. For a smaller office, Gusto is often the easiest.

If you want, I can narrow it down by practice size, number of employees, and whether you need scheduling/time tracking too.

retrieval Mentioned

Good options for healthcare practices:

  • Paychex Flex — strong for small-to-mid practices that want payroll plus time tracking, benefits, and healthcare-oriented compliance support. (paychex.com)
  • ADP — solid if you want a widely used payroll/HR platform with a dedicated healthcare offering and scalability. (adp.com)
  • UKG — a strong choice for larger practices, groups, or multi-site organizations that need scheduling, timekeeping, and payroll together, especially in healthcare settings. (ukg.com)
  • Gusto — best for smaller practices that want something simpler and easier to use; it’s positioned for healthcare teams and includes payroll, onboarding, and integrations. (gusto.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • 1–25 employees: Gusto or Paychex. (gusto.com)
  • 25–200 employees: Paychex or ADP. (paychex.com)
  • Multi-location / heavier scheduling needs: UKG. (ukg.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your practice size and specialty.

What are the best payroll platforms for nonprofits? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for nonprofits:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for small/mid-sized nonprofits. Easy to use, solid tax filing, direct deposit, benefits, and good integrations. Often a strong fit for lean teams.

  1. OnPay

Great value for nonprofits. Simple pricing, handles payroll well, and supports nonprofits/faith-based orgs nicely. Good if you want straightforward setup without a lot of extras.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for larger or growing nonprofits. Strong compliance tools, multiple employee types, and scalable support. Pricier, but very robust.

  1. Paychex Flex

Good for nonprofits that want more hands-on service. Strong HR/payroll support and compliance help, especially if you have complex payroll needs.

  1. Rippling

Best if you want payroll plus IT and HR in one system. Very flexible, but more advanced than some smaller nonprofits need.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if your nonprofit already uses QuickBooks for accounting. Convenient and tightly integrated, though not as nonprofit-specific as some others.

Best picks by need

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best budget/value: OnPay
  • Best for scale/compliance: ADP RUN or Paychex Flex
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, staff size, or whether you need 1099 contractor support and nonprofit grant tracking.

retrieval Mentioned

Here’s a solid shortlist for nonprofits:

  • Best overall / most scalable: ADP — strong compliance, flexible add-ons, and nonprofit-specific guidance for W-2/1099 workers and Form 990 workflows. (adp.com)
  • Best for ease of use: Gusto — simple nonprofit payroll + HR, automated payroll taxes, and good integration options for nonprofit accounting tools like Aplos. (gusto.com)
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay — straightforward nonprofit payroll, contractor support, and pricing that starts low for smaller orgs. (onpay.com)
  • Best if you want accounting + payroll together: QuickBooks Payroll — especially useful if you already use QuickBooks for fund/program tracking and reporting. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Best for larger/complex orgs: Rippling — good if you want payroll plus HR/IT in one system and need something that scales. (rippling.com)
  • Also worth a look for small nonprofits: Paychex and Patriot. (paychex.com)

For nonprofits, the big payroll must-haves are: handling both W-2s and 1099s, staying compliant, and supporting your reporting needs. Also, 501(c)(3) organizations are generally exempt from FUTA, but still need to handle other employment taxes. (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to:

  1. small nonprofit under 25 staff,
  2. church/ministry, or
  3. growing nonprofit with grants and multiple programs.
Which payroll platforms are best for construction companies? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Best payroll platforms for construction companies:

  1. Foundation Software Payroll

Best for: construction-specific payroll + job costing

  • Strong certified payroll / prevailing wage support
  • Built for construction accounting and labor tracking
  • Good fit for contractors who need detailed job costing
  1. Viewpoint Spectrum by Trimble

Best for: mid-size to large contractors

  • Solid payroll, job costing, and compliance tools
  • Good if you also want project management/accounting integration
  • Popular in commercial construction
  1. Sage 300 Construction and Real Estate (Sage 300 CRE)

Best for: larger construction firms with complex payroll

  • Strong payroll and union/prevailing wage handling
  • Good for multi-entity, multi-state operations
  • More robust, but usually heavier to implement
  1. ADP Workforce Now

Best for: companies wanting a mainstream payroll platform

  • Reliable payroll, tax filing, direct deposit, HR tools
  • Good for multi-state payroll and compliance
  • Less construction-native than Foundation/Viewpoint, but very strong operationally
  1. QuickBooks Payroll + QuickBooks Online Advanced

Best for: small contractors

  • Easy to use and affordable
  • Works well for small teams with simpler payroll
  • Not ideal if you need advanced certified payroll or deep job costing
  1. Paylocity

Best for: growing contractors needing HR + payroll

  • Good employee self-service and time tracking
  • Strong HR features
  • Construction-specific features are more limited than Foundation
My quick picks
  • Best overall for construction: Foundation Software
  • Best for larger contractors: Viewpoint Spectrum
  • Best for small construction businesses: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best if you want a big payroll vendor: ADP Workforce Now

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-company-size comparison or a construction payroll checklist for evaluating vendors.

retrieval Not mentioned

For most construction companies, the best payroll platforms are:

  • FOUNDATION Payroll — best if you need certified payroll, prevailing wage, union payroll, and construction job costing in one system. (foundationsoft.com)
  • ADP Workforce Now for Construction — best for larger or multi-state contractors that want payroll + HR + ERP integrations, with support for prevailing wage, union rules, and government contracts. (apps.adp.com)
  • Paychex for Construction & Skilled Trades — a strong choice if you want a more general payroll/HR platform tailored to construction and skilled trades, especially for reducing admin time. (paychex.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best for smaller contractors who want simpler payroll, time tracking, and tax filing in a lower-complexity setup. (quickbooks.intuit.com)

If you do public works or Davis-Bacon jobs, prioritize a platform with certified payroll and prevailing wage support. (foundationsoft.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your company size (small, midsize, or enterprise).

What payroll platforms are best for restaurants with tipped employees? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For restaurants with tipped employees, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle tip reporting, tip credits, tip pooling, and POS integration cleanly.

Top picks:

  1. Toast Payroll & Team Management

Best overall for restaurants already using Toast POS. Strong tip workflows, time tracking, tip pooling, and restaurant-specific compliance.

  1. Gusto

Best for smaller restaurants that want an easy setup. Good UI, solid payroll, tip reporting, and works well if you don’t need deep restaurant-specific features.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for larger or multi-location restaurants. Strong compliance support, tax filing, and more robust HR/payroll options.

  1. Paychex Flex

Good for restaurants that want payroll plus HR and scheduling support. Reliable for tipped payroll, but less restaurant-native than Toast.

  1. Square Payroll

Best for very small restaurants, cafes, or food trucks using Square POS. Simple and affordable, with decent tip handling.

  1. 7shifts Payroll

Best if labor scheduling is a huge pain point. Great restaurant scheduling and labor tools, especially for tipped teams, though many operators pair it with another payroll system.

Best by use case:

  • Best overall for restaurants: Toast Payroll
  • Best simple option: Gusto
  • Best for multi-location: ADP RUN
  • Best budget-friendly: Square Payroll
  • Best for scheduling + labor: 7shifts

If you tell me your POS system, number of locations, and whether you do tip pooling, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

retrieval Mentioned

For restaurants with tipped employees, the strongest options are usually:

  • Toast Payroll & Team Management — best if you already use Toast POS. Toast says it’s built for restaurant-specific scenarios like overtime, tip-outs, multiple pay rates, and tip reporting. (pos.toasttab.com)
  • Restaurant365 Payroll & HR — best for multi-unit or operations-heavy restaurants. R365 automates tip management by importing tips from the POS, mapping them to payroll, and handling multiple pay rates/role switching. (restaurant365.com)
  • Square Payroll — best for smaller restaurants on Square POS. Square supports importing credit card tips, pooled or direct tip payout, and declaring cash tips in the team app. (squareup.com)
  • ADP RUN / ADP Workforce — best for restaurants that want deeper compliance tooling. ADP’s tipped-establishment features track cash and credit card tips, assist with tip allocation, and support tip credit reporting. (support.adp.com)
  • Gusto — best simple, user-friendly choice for smaller restaurants. Gusto supports tip wages, service charges, and FICA tip credit reporting/help, though it’s less restaurant-specialized than Toast or R365. (support.gusto.com)

My quick pick:

  • Best overall for restaurants: Toast
  • Best for larger/multi-location ops: Restaurant365
  • Best budget/simple setup: Square
  • Best general payroll + compliance: ADP or Gusto

If you want, I can narrow this to small café, full-service restaurant, or multi-location group.

What payroll platforms are best for accounting firms managing clients? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For accounting firms managing multiple clients, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. ADP Accountant Connect + ADP Run/Workforce Now
    • Best for: firms that want broad payroll coverage and strong compliance tools
    • Pros: scalable, reliable tax filing, good multi-client support
    • Good if you manage a mix of small and mid-market clients
  2. Intuit QuickBooks Payroll + QuickBooks Online Accountant
    • Best for: firms already heavy on QuickBooks
    • Pros: easy client management, smooth bookkeeping integration, familiar workflow
    • Best for small-business clients
  3. Gusto Accountant
    • Best for: firms with lots of small-business clients and a need for simplicity
    • Pros: clean UX, strong onboarding, benefits and payroll in one place
    • Great for startups and SMBs
  4. Paychex Partner Pro
    • Best for: firms wanting a dedicated accountant channel and strong service
    • Pros: robust support, tax filing, HR add-ons, good for multi-client oversight
  5. OnPay
    • Best for: firms prioritizing value and ease of use
    • Pros: straightforward pricing, good payroll + tax handling, solid for smaller clients
  6. Wagepoint
    • Best for: boutique firms and agencies serving small businesses
    • Pros: simple, accountant-friendly, good partner tools
  7. BambooHR Payroll
    • Best for: clients already using BambooHR for HR
    • Pros: useful if your clients want HR + payroll together, though less accountant-centric
Best overall picks
  • Best overall for accounting firms: ADP Accountant Connect
  • Best for QuickBooks-heavy firms: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best easy-to-use option: Gusto Accountant
  • Best value: OnPay

If you want, I can also rank these by pricing, client portal quality, or multi-client workflow.

retrieval Mentioned

For accounting firms managing client payroll, the strongest options are usually:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small and mid-sized firms that want a clean accountant dashboard, automated onboarding, and a strong partner program. Gusto says it supports 14,000+ accounting firms and offers free firm payroll plus revenue share/discounts for clients. (gusto.com)
  • ADP RUN for Partners — best for firms that need a more enterprise-grade payroll stack, multi-client reporting, and broad accounting integrations like QuickBooks, Xero, and Sage. ADP’s Accountant Connect is built for multi-client payroll management. (adp.com)
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one platform, especially for firms serving more complex clients. Rippling highlights bulk updates, partner billing, revenue share, and multi-client workflows for accountant partners. (rippling.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best for firms already deep in the Intuit/QuickBooks ecosystem. QuickBooks Online Accountant includes payroll workflows, and firms can get QuickBooks Payroll Elite for free while clients get discounted plans. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Paychex — best for firms that want a formal accountant partner/referral model and strong client-data visibility. Paychex offers Partner Pro, shared-client dashboards, and CPA.com/AICPA-backed partner programs. (paychex.com)
  • OnPay — best lighter-weight choice for smaller firms that want simple client management and good QuickBooks/Xero mapping. OnPay’s partner dashboard lets accountants manage clients in one place, and it offers free firm payroll plus revenue sharing or discounts. (onpay.com)

My short ranking:

  1. Gusto for most firms
  2. ADP for larger/more complex practices
  3. Rippling for advisory-heavy firms
  4. QuickBooks Payroll if you live in QBO
  5. Paychex if partner/referral programs matter most (gusto.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a best-by-firm-size comparison table.

What payroll platforms support contractors and employees? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Several payroll platforms support both employees and contractors:

  • Gusto — payroll for W-2 employees and 1099 contractors
  • Rippling — employee payroll plus contractor payments
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — employees and contractors
  • Paychex Flex — supports both
  • QuickBooks Payroll — employee payroll and contractor tracking/payments
  • Deel — strong for global employees and contractors
  • Remote — hires/pays both employees and contractors internationally
  • Oyster — employees and contractors, especially global teams
  • Papaya Global — international payroll for employees and contractors
  • Square Payroll — employees and contractors, popular for small businesses

If you want, I can narrow this down by small business, startup, or global/international use case.

retrieval Mentioned

A few payroll platforms that support both employees and contractors include:

  • Gusto — employee payroll plus contractor payments and 1099s. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Online Payroll — pays employees and contractors, with W-2 and 1099 filing. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Rippling — payroll for employees and contractor support in the same platform. (rippling.com)
  • Paychex — payroll platform that supports employees and contractors; its payroll is primarily geared to U.S.-based workers. (paychex.com)
  • Paycom — payroll/HR platform centered on employee payroll; it’s typically used for employee management rather than contractor-first workflows. (paycom.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best option for a small business, startup, or global team.

What are the best payroll platforms for hourly and salaried staff? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For mixed hourly + salaried teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto
    • Best all-around for small to mid-sized businesses
    • Great for hourly tracking, salaried payroll, benefits, and onboarding
    • Easy UI and strong automation
  2. ADP RUN
    • Best for businesses that want a more established payroll provider
    • Strong compliance, tax filing, and multi-state payroll
    • Good for both hourly time tracking and salaried employees
  3. Paychex Flex
    • Best for growing businesses with more complex payroll needs
    • Solid time & attendance tools for hourly staff
    • Good HR add-ons and compliance support
  4. Rippling
    • Best if you want payroll plus HR/IT in one system
    • Excellent automation for salaried and hourly workers
    • Strong for businesses with onboarding and device/app management needs
  5. QuickBooks Payroll
    • Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting
    • Simple payroll for hourly and salaried teams
    • Easy tax handling, but less robust than Gusto/ADP for HR features
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for larger or multi-state teams: ADP RUN
  • Best for automation: Rippling
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for scalable HR + payroll: Paychex Flex

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by company size (1–10, 10–50, 50–200, 200+) or compare pricing.

retrieval Mentioned

For mixed hourly + salaried teams, the strongest picks are:

  • Gusto — best for small businesses that want simple payroll plus built-in time tracking, multiple pay rates, overtime support, and employee self-service. (gusto.com)
  • Rippling — best for a more all-in-one system; approved hours flow directly into payroll, and it has strong time-and-attendance plus mobile clock-in. (rippling.com)
  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP time tracking — best for larger or more complex teams that need robust scheduling, payroll-policy calculations, and compliance controls. (apps.adp.com)
  • Paychex Flex — good if you want payroll plus flexible clock-in options (mobile, kiosk, time clock) and scheduling features. (paychex.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll + QuickBooks Time — best if you already use QuickBooks and want time tracking tied tightly to payroll. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • OnPay — a solid simpler option for businesses that need payroll for both hourly and salaried staff with time-tracking integrations. (onpay.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Growing/more complex workforce: Rippling or ADP
  • Already in QuickBooks: QuickBooks Time + Payroll
  • Need a straightforward payroll-first option: OnPay or Paychex

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your company size and budget.

What payroll platforms are good for seasonal businesses? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Good payroll platforms for seasonal businesses:

  • Gusto — Easy to start/stop employees, good for small teams, solid time tracking and contractor pay.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting; simple for seasonal hiring and tax filings.
  • ADP Run — Strong for businesses that scale up and down; good compliance support and multi-state payroll.
  • Rippling — Great if you need payroll plus HR and onboarding for temporary staff.
  • Paychex Flex — Flexible for seasonal staffing, with good support and payroll tax handling.
  • Square Payroll — Nice for retail, food trucks, and hospitality; especially useful if you already use Square POS.

Best picks by situation:

  • Small seasonal business: Gusto
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • More complex compliance / multi-state: ADP Run or Paychex Flex
  • Need fast onboarding for temps: Rippling

If you want, I can narrow it down by business type (retail, landscaping, hospitality, agriculture, etc.).

retrieval Mentioned

Good picks for seasonal businesses are:

  • Gusto — strong if you hire and release workers often. It has onboarding, time tracking, self-service, and support for seasonal/hourly workers, plus time kiosk/geofencing for shifts. (gusto.com)
  • OnPay — a solid small-business option with easy onboarding, e-sign paperwork, employee portals, and HR workflows. (onpay.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks, since it pairs payroll with time tracking, HR, and team-management tools. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Paychex Flex — better for businesses that want more HR/compliance help, with onboarding, mobile access, payroll, and time/attendance tools. (paychex.com)
  • Rippling — best for more complex seasonal operations because it combines payroll, onboarding/offboarding, scheduling, and mobile workforce tools in one system. (rippling.com)
  • ADP Workforce Now — a stronger choice if you need robust scheduling/time tools and more enterprise-style workforce management. (adp.com)

My quick recommendation:

  • Small seasonal team: Gusto or OnPay
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Larger or more complex staffing: Rippling or ADP
  • Need heavier HR support: Paychex

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your business type (retail, landscaping, hospitality, agriculture, events, etc.).

What payroll platforms are best for remote-first companies? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For remote-first companies, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle multi-country payroll, contractor payments, and compliance well.

Top picks
  • Deel — Best all-around for global remote teams; strong for contractors, EOR, and international payroll.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; great for U.S.-based teams going remote.
  • Remote — Best for companies hiring internationally; simple global payroll and employer-of-record services.
  • Papaya Global — Strong for complex international payroll and workforce management.
  • Multiplier — Good for lean startups hiring across multiple countries.
  • Gusto — Best for U.S. startups with remote employees, but not ideal for broad global payroll.
  • ADP — Best for larger companies needing enterprise-grade payroll and compliance.
Quick recommendation
  • Mostly U.S. remote team: Rippling or Gusto
  • Global contractors + employees: Deel or Remote
  • Enterprise/global complexity: Papaya Global or ADP

If you want, I can narrow this down by team size, countries, and whether you hire employees or contractors.

retrieval Mentioned

For remote-first companies, the strongest payroll platforms right now are usually:

  • Deel — best all-around for global teams. It combines global payroll, EOR, and contractor management in one platform, and supports payroll across 90+ locations. (deel.com)
  • Remote — best for clean global hiring/payroll compliance. Remote offers in-house global payroll and EOR, with direct ownership of entities in many markets. (remote.com)
  • Oyster — best for predictable pricing and early-stage distributed teams. Oyster supports global payroll, contractors, and EOR, and positions itself as a single place for global employment needs. (oysterhr.com)
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll plus HR/IT/finance automation. Rippling’s global platform includes EOR, global payroll, contractor pay, benefits, and spend management. (rippling.com)
  • Gusto — best for US-based remote-first companies that are also hiring internationally. Gusto handles US payroll well and offers global payroll/EOR through Remote. (gusto.com)
  • Justworks — best for smaller teams that want simple payroll and an easier path into EOR. Justworks now offers standalone payroll, international contractor payments, and EOR for global hiring. (justworks.com)

Quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your company size, countries, and budget.

What payroll platforms are best for businesses with multiple locations? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For businesses with multiple locations, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle:

  • multiple tax jurisdictions
  • location-based labor rules
  • time tracking across sites
  • manager-level approvals
  • HR + payroll in one system
Best options

1. ADP Workforce Now

  • Strongest all-around for multi-location payroll
  • Great tax compliance and reporting
  • Scales well for mid-size to large businesses

2. Paychex Flex

  • Good for companies with several branches or retail locations
  • Solid payroll, HR, and time tracking
  • Easier to use than some enterprise systems

3. Gusto

  • Best for smaller businesses with multiple locations
  • Simple interface, good onboarding, solid automations
  • Best if you want easy setup over deep enterprise features

4. Rippling

  • Great if you also need IT, HR, and payroll in one platform
  • Very strong for distributed teams and location-based permissions
  • Good automation and integrations

5. Paylocity

  • Strong for growing companies with multiple sites
  • Good time and attendance tools
  • Useful employee self-service and manager workflows

6. UKG Pro / UKG Ready

  • Best for larger operations and complex scheduling
  • Excellent for hourly workforces, labor management, and multi-site operations
  • More powerful, but usually more complex and expensive
Quick picks
  • Best overall: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best for growing businesses: Paychex Flex
  • Best ease of use: Gusto
  • Best automation: Rippling
  • Best for hourly/multi-shift teams: UKG Ready

If you want, I can also give you a best payroll platform by business size or compare 2–3 options side by side.

retrieval Mentioned

For businesses with multiple locations, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  • Rippling — best if you want one system for payroll + HR + IT, and your locations/rules get complex. It supports location-based rules and automated multi-state tax handling. (rippling.com)
  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Global Payroll — best for larger or enterprise teams, especially if you need strong multi-location or multi-country coverage and established compliance infrastructure. (adp.com)
  • Paylocity — strong mid-market option for companies running payroll across multiple states or sites, with unified payroll and time/labor workflows. (paylocity.com)
  • Paychex Flex — good for businesses with multiple U.S. locations that want payroll, tax filing, reporting, and support in a more traditional payroll platform. (paychex.com)
  • Gusto — best for smaller businesses with multiple entities or states that want simplicity and transparent pricing. (gusto.com)

Quick pick:

  • Small/mid-size multi-location: Gusto or Paylocity. (gusto.com)
  • Complex ops / fast growth: Rippling. (rippling.com)
  • Enterprise / global: ADP. (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down by headcount, number of states/countries, and budget.

What payroll platforms are best for international teams? discovery
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

For international teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  • Deel — best overall for global hiring, contractors, and EOR in one place
  • Remote — strong for compliant global payroll and employer-of-record setup
  • Papaya Global — great for multinational payroll automation and analytics
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll plus HR/IT in one system, especially for growing teams
  • Oyster — good for distributed teams focused on hiring and paying people globally
  • ADP GlobalView / ADP Celergo — best for large enterprises with complex country coverage

Quick picks:

  • Startups / fast growth: Deel, Remote
  • Mid-market: Papaya Global, Rippling
  • Enterprise: ADP, Papaya Global
  • Contractors only: Deel, Remote

If you want, I can also give you the best choice by team size, countries, or budget.

retrieval Not mentioned

For international teams, the best picks are usually:

  • Deel — best all-around for global payroll + contractors + EOR in one platform; it says it supports payroll across 130+ countries. (deel.com)
  • Remote — strong if you want a clean platform with in-house global payroll; Remote says its payroll is available in many countries and has expanded to 100+ countries. (support.remote.com)
  • Papaya Global — good for larger, more complex multi-country payroll and payments; Papaya says it covers 160+ countries for payments and positions itself as an end-to-end workforce/payroll platform. (papayaglobal.com)
  • ADP Global Payroll — best enterprise choice if you want a big, established vendor; ADP says it manages payroll in over 60 countries and has global multi-country payroll leadership recognition. (adp.com)
  • Oyster — strong for distributed teams that also need EOR; Oyster says global payroll is available in 26+ / 30+ countries depending on the page, while its broader employment platform supports hiring in 180+ countries. (oysterhr.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • Small/mid-size global team: Deel or Remote. (deel.com)
  • Enterprise / lots of countries / complex compliance: ADP or Papaya. (adp.com)
  • Need to hire without entities: Oyster or Deel. (oysterhr.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best option for your team size, countries, and budget.

What payroll platforms are easiest to set up? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

The easiest payroll platforms to set up are usually:

  1. Gusto – probably the simplest overall for small businesses. Very friendly setup, strong onboarding, and easy tax filings.
  2. QuickBooks Payroll – easiest if you already use QuickBooks Online for bookkeeping.
  3. Square Payroll – great if you already use Square for payments/POS; very quick to get running.
  4. OnPay – simple, clean setup with solid support; good for small teams.
  5. Rippling – fast to deploy, but a bit more “all-in-one HR” than basic payroll.
  6. Deel – easiest if you’re paying international contractors/employees.

Best pick for most small businesses: Gusto Best if you use QuickBooks already: QuickBooks Payroll Best for retail/restaurant teams using Square: Square Payroll

If you want, I can narrow this down by number of employees, state(s), and whether you pay contractors or W-2 staff.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want the easiest payroll platforms to set up, I’d shortlist:

  • QuickBooks Online Payroll — probably the easiest if you want done-for-you setup; Intuit says an expert will set up your account so you can pay your team in less than 5 minutes. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • OnPay — very easy if you want hands-on onboarding; OnPay says setup is fast, includes free account setup and dedicated onboarding, and they can have you running in a matter of days. (onpay.com)
  • Gusto — best for a simple self-serve setup; Gusto says onboarding is simple and you can run payroll in just a few clicks. (gusto.com)
  • Justworks — good if you want an easy all-in-one HR/payroll platform; Justworks emphasizes quick onboarding and a user-friendly setup. (justworks.com)

My quick pick:

If you want, I can narrow this to solo contractor, small team, or hourly employees.

What payroll platforms have strong tax filing support? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Some payroll platforms known for strong tax filing support:

  • Gusto — very strong for automatic federal, state, and local tax filings/payments; great for small businesses.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — excellent tax compliance and filing coverage; strong for larger or more complex businesses.
  • Paychex Flex — solid tax filing support with good compliance tools and specialist assistance.
  • Rippling Payroll — good automated tax filing, especially if you also want HR/IT in one system.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — convenient if you already use QuickBooks; handles tax calculations and filings well.
  • OnPay — highly rated for straightforward, reliable tax filing support at a competitive price.
  • Square Payroll — good for small hourly/staff-heavy businesses, with automatic tax filing in supported states.

If you want the best overall for ease of use, I’d look at Gusto or OnPay. For more complex compliance needs, ADP or Paychex are stronger.

retrieval Mentioned

If tax filing is your top priority, the strongest payroll platforms are usually:

  • ADP — best for large/complex payrolls and multi-state tax compliance; ADP offers full-service payroll with tax support and separate employment-tax filing/remittance tools. (adp.com)
  • Paychex — very strong for automated tax calculations and filing, especially if you want dedicated support and compliance monitoring. (paychex.com)
  • Gusto — best for small and midsize businesses that want hands-off federal/state/local tax filing and year-end forms; Gusto automatically files many core payroll tax forms and pays taxes on your behalf. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks, with e-file/e-pay support and tax penalty protection on higher tiers. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Rippling — strong for companies that want automated federal, state, and local tax filing plus broader HR/IT automation. (rippling.com)

Short version:

  • Best overall tax/compliance depth: ADP
  • Best SMB ease of use: Gusto
  • Best if you’re already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best if you want payroll + HR/IT automation: Rippling (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to small business, multi-state, or enterprise options.

What payroll platforms include direct deposit? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Most major payroll platforms include direct deposit, including:

  • Gusto
  • ADP RUN
  • Paychex Flex
  • QuickBooks Payroll
  • OnPay
  • Rippling
  • Square Payroll
  • SurePayroll
  • Zenefits / TriNet HR Platform
  • BambooHR Payroll (via payroll partners in some setups)

If you want, I can also narrow this down by small business, contractor payments, or lowest-cost options.

retrieval Mentioned

Most major payroll platforms include direct deposit, including Gusto, QuickBooks Online Payroll, ADP, OnPay, Paychex, and Paycom. (gusto.com)

A few quick notes:

  • Gusto: direct deposit is a core payroll feature. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll: lets you pay employees by direct deposit into their bank accounts. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • ADP: offers direct deposit as part of payroll services. (adp.com)
  • OnPay: supports direct deposit, check, or debit card. (onpay.com)
  • Paychex: payroll services include direct deposit. (paychex.com)
  • Paycom: supports direct deposit payroll software and employee self-service setup. (paycom.com)

If you want, I can narrow these down by small business, price, or best ease of use.

What payroll platforms integrate with accounting software? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Many payroll platforms integrate with accounting software. Common ones include:

  • Gusto — integrates with QuickBooks Online, Xero, and FreshBooks
  • ADP RUN / ADP Workforce Now — integrates with QuickBooks, Xero, Sage Intacct, and NetSuite
  • Paychex Flex — integrates with QuickBooks, Xero, and some Sage products
  • QuickBooks Payroll — works natively with QuickBooks Online/Desktop
  • Rippling Payroll — integrates with QuickBooks Online, NetSuite, and Xero
  • OnPay — integrates with QuickBooks Online, Xero, and Sage
  • Patriot Payroll — integrates with QuickBooks and Xero
  • BambooHR Payroll — integrates with QuickBooks and other accounting systems
  • Zenefits Payroll — integrates with QuickBooks Online
  • Square Payroll — integrates with QuickBooks Online

If you tell me which accounting software you use (e.g. QuickBooks, Xero, NetSuite, Sage), I can narrow it down to the best payroll options.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes—many payroll platforms integrate with accounting software. Common examples include:

  • Gusto → integrates with QuickBooks Online and Xero. (docs.gusto.com)
  • Paychex Flex → integrates with QuickBooks, Xero, Sage Intacct, and Oracle NetSuite. (paychex.com)
  • ADP → supports accounting integrations/GL posting with QuickBooks Online and Xero. (mediacenter.adp.com)
  • Xero payroll in the U.S. → uses Gusto as its payroll partner/integration. (xero.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to:

  1. best payroll + QuickBooks options,
  2. best payroll + Xero options, or
  3. cheapest payroll platforms with accounting integrations.
What payroll platforms are best for benefits and payroll together? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for payroll + benefits in one place:

  1. Gusto
    • Best for: small businesses
    • Strong on: payroll, health benefits, 401(k), workers’ comp, onboarding
    • Why it stands out: easiest all-in-one UX
  2. Rippling
    • Best for: growing companies
    • Strong on: payroll, benefits admin, device/app management, HR automation
    • Why it stands out: very flexible and powerful
  3. Justworks
    • Best for: startups and teams that want PEO-style support
    • Strong on: payroll, medical/dental/vision, 401(k), compliance
    • Why it stands out: simple benefits access and admin help
  4. ADP Workforce Now
    • Best for: mid-market to enterprise
    • Strong on: full payroll, benefits administration, compliance, HR suite
    • Why it stands out: depth and scalability
  5. Paychex Flex
    • Best for: small to midsize businesses
    • Strong on: payroll, benefits, retirement, HR tools
    • Why it stands out: solid support and broad services

Quick pick:

  • Easiest: Gusto
  • Most powerful/all-in-one: Rippling
  • Best if you want compliance help + benefits: Justworks
  • Best for larger teams: ADP

If you tell me your company size, state(s), and whether you need health insurance/401(k), I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

retrieval Mentioned

If you want one platform for payroll + benefits, my short list is:

  • Rippling — best if you want the most unified automation; it keeps HR, payroll, and benefits in one system and syncs deductions/eligibility automatically. (rippling.com)
  • Gusto — best for small businesses; it markets payroll, benefits, and HR all in one place, with health benefits synced to payroll. (gusto.com)
  • ADP — best for larger or more complex teams; ADP offers payroll plus benefits administration, and its PEO/marketplace tools connect benefits data back to payroll. (adp.com)
  • Paychex Flex — best if you want a service-heavy all-in-one option; Paychex positions Flex as a unified HCM platform for payroll, benefits, and workforce management. (paychex.com)
  • Justworks — best if you want payroll + benefits with PEO support; Justworks’ PEO is an all-in-one payroll, HR, and benefits solution, and its payroll product also offers benefits with automatic payroll deduction handling. (help.justworks.com)

My quick pick:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Fast-growing / most automated: Rippling
  • Enterprise / more complex compliance: ADP
  • Hands-on support / PEO: Paychex or Justworks

If you want, I can narrow this down by company size, budget, and whether you need medical/401(k)/FSA/HSA.

What payroll platforms are best for growing companies? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For growing companies, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that scale well with hiring, compliance, benefits, and multi-state operations.

Best overall

Gusto

  • Best for: startups and small-to-mid sized teams
  • Why: easy setup, clean UI, strong payroll + benefits + HR basics
  • Good if you want something simple that won’t feel heavy
Best for fast-growing teams

Rippling

  • Best for: companies adding employees quickly, especially with HR + IT needs
  • Why: payroll, benefits, device management, and app provisioning in one system
  • Strong automation and integrations
Best for larger or more complex payroll

ADP Workforce Now

  • Best for: growing companies that need enterprise-grade payroll and compliance
  • Why: very strong compliance, reporting, and support
  • Better for companies with more complexity, but less modern-feeling
Best for mid-market HR + payroll

Paychex Flex

  • Best for: businesses that need payroll plus HR services and support
  • Why: solid payroll engine, good service options, scalable
  • Often chosen by companies outgrowing basic payroll tools
Best for all-in-one finance + payroll

QuickBooks Payroll

  • Best for: companies already using QuickBooks accounting
  • Why: tight accounting integration, easy for small businesses
  • Not as strong as Rippling or ADP for scaling complexity
Best for global hiring

Deel

  • Best for: distributed teams and international contractors/employees
  • Why: excellent for global payroll, contractors, and EOR services
  • Great if you’re hiring across countries
Best for startups with modern HR needs

BambooHR + payroll add-on

  • Best for: companies that want strong HR first, payroll second
  • Why: excellent employee records and HR workflow
  • Payroll is good, though not as powerful as dedicated payroll-first platforms
Quick recommendations
  • Simplest strong choice: Gusto
  • Best scaling choice: Rippling
  • Best for compliance-heavy growth: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best for global teams: Deel

If you want, I can also give you a “best payroll platforms by company size” shortlist.

retrieval Mentioned

For growing companies, the best payroll platforms usually are:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small to mid-sized teams that want payroll + benefits + HR in one place. It has unlimited payroll runs, multi-state payroll, tax filing, and a clear upgrade path to more support as you grow. (gusto.com)
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll tied to HR, IT, and finance in one system, especially if you expect to scale fast or hire globally. Rippling’s platform is built for global payroll and says it can help companies avoid reimplementation as they grow. (rippling.com)
  • ADP RUN / ADP — best for companies that want a very established provider with a strong path from small business into larger/more complex payroll. ADP says RUN is built for small business, and ADP also positions itself for midsize and global payroll needs. (adp.com)
  • Paychex Flex — best if you want payroll that can scale with lots of service options and add-ons. Paychex says Flex is built to grow with your business and offers payroll, benefits, and workforce management on one platform. (paychex.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if your accounting already lives in QuickBooks and you want tight bookkeeping integration. It offers payroll, tax filing, same-day direct deposit, and integrates with QuickBooks Online accounting. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Deel — best for globally distributed teams. Deel is focused on global payroll and hiring, with support for international workforce management and compliance. (deel.com)

Simple pick:

  • Most growing U.S. companies: Gusto. (gusto.com)
  • Fast-scaling or global companies: Rippling or Deel. (rippling.com)
  • More traditional, enterprise-ready route: ADP or Paychex. (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your company size, budget, and whether you hire internationally.

What payroll platforms are best for budget-conscious businesses? discovery
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For budget-conscious businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Patriot Payroll
    • Best for: lowest-cost simple payroll
    • Why: very affordable, straightforward, good for small teams
    • Watch for: fewer HR/features than bigger platforms
  2. Gusto
    • Best for: best overall value
    • Why: easy to use, good automation, solid benefits and HR add-ons
    • Watch for: can get pricier as you add features
  3. OnPay
    • Best for: small businesses that want strong features without complexity
    • Why: flat pricing, includes payroll, tax filing, and decent HR tools
    • Watch for: not as many advanced add-ons as enterprise platforms
  4. SurePayroll
    • Best for: very small businesses and household payroll
    • Why: affordable, simple setup, good for basic payroll needs
    • Watch for: interface feels less modern than Gusto
  5. Wave Payroll
    • Best for: microbusinesses already using Wave accounting
    • Why: convenient if you want accounting + payroll together
    • Watch for: availability is limited in some areas

Quick pick:

  • Cheapest simple option: Patriot Payroll
  • Best all-around budget pick: OnPay or Gusto
  • Best for ultra-small teams: SurePayroll or Wave Payroll

If you want, I can also rank these by lowest monthly cost, easiest setup, or best for contractors vs W-2 employees.

retrieval Mentioned

For budget-conscious businesses, these are the best-value payroll platforms right now:

  • Patriot Payroll — usually the cheapest full-service option. Basic Payroll starts at $17/month + $4/worker, and Full Service is $37/month + $5/worker. Good if you want low cost and simple payroll. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • OnPay — strong flat-rate value at $55/month + $6/person with no surprises; good for small teams that want full-service payroll without lots of add-ons. (onpay.com)
  • Square Payroll — great if you already use Square; full-service payroll starts at $35/month + $6/person. Also a solid fit for contractor-heavy businesses. (squareup.com)
  • Gusto — a bit pricier, but very user-friendly; Simple plan is $49/month + $6/person and includes unlimited payroll runs and tax filings. Best if you want ease of use and room to grow. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks; pricing is tied to bundles, with payroll + bookkeeping starting around $44/month + $6.50/employee on the current promo page. (quickbooks.intuit.com)

Quick pick:

  • Cheapest overall: Patriot
  • Best flat-rate value: OnPay
  • Best for Square users: Square Payroll
  • Best ease-of-use: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll (patriotsoftware.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to solo owner, 5–10 employees, or restaurant/retail/contractor-heavy use cases.

What are the best alternatives to leading payroll platform options? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are strong alternatives to the big-name payroll platforms, depending on what you need:

  • Gusto — best for small businesses; simple payroll, benefits, and strong UX.
  • Rippling — best all-in-one option; payroll + HR + IT in one system.
  • OnPay — great value for SMBs; solid payroll and HR with lower complexity.
  • Paychex Flex — good for growing businesses that want more HR support.
  • Square Payroll — best for retail, restaurants, and hourly teams already using Square.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • Deel — best for international payroll and contractors.
  • Remote — another strong choice for global payroll/EOR.
  • Patriot Payroll — budget-friendly, straightforward payroll for very small businesses.
  • BambooHR Payroll — best if you want payroll tied closely to HR.

If you want, I can narrow this down by:

  1. business size,
  2. country, or
  3. budget/features.
retrieval Mentioned

Assuming you mean alternatives to big-name payroll platforms like ADP, Gusto, Rippling, and Paychex, the best picks are usually:

  • OnPay — best all-around simple US payroll; flat pricing, unlimited pay runs, and tax filing in all 50 states. (help.onpay.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting; payroll is built into the same ecosystem and includes automated taxes/forms. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Square Payroll — best for retail, restaurant, and shift-based teams, especially if you already use Square POS; payroll starts at $35/month + $6/person. (squareup.com)
  • Patriot Payroll — best budget-friendly option for small US businesses; it offers basic and full-service payroll plus simple add-ons. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Deel Payroll — best if you hire across borders or want US + global payroll in one place; it supports payroll in all 50 US states and international payroll/EOR. (deel.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

If you want, I can narrow this to the best alternative for your company size, state count, and budget.

What are the best payroll platform alternatives for small businesses? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platform alternatives for small businesses:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for most small businesses.

  • Easy setup, clean interface
  • Payroll, benefits, HR, onboarding in one place
  • Good for teams that want “set it and forget it”
  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks.

  • Strong accounting integration
  • Solid tax filing and direct deposit
  • Good for small businesses that want bookkeeping + payroll together
  1. Rippling

Best for growing small businesses with more HR needs.

  • Payroll plus HR, IT, device management
  • Very automated
  • Great if you expect to scale fast
  1. OnPay

Best value for straightforward payroll.

  • Simple pricing
  • Good for hourly workers, contractors, and nonprofits
  • Less flashy, but very reliable
  1. ADP Run

Best for businesses that want a big-name provider.

  • Strong compliance and support
  • Good tax handling
  • Can be pricier than newer tools
  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that may need more advanced HR support later.

  • Payroll, HR, retirement, and benefits options
  • Good support network
  • Flexible for mixed needs
  1. Square Payroll

Best for retail, restaurants, and businesses already using Square.

  • Works well with Square POS
  • Easy for hourly teams and contractors
  • Simple and affordable

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for scaling: Rippling
  • Best budget choice: OnPay
  • Best for Square users: Square Payroll

If you want, I can also give you a top 5 comparison by price, features, and best use case.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are the best small-business payroll platform alternatives right now:

  • OnPay — best if you want a simpler all-in-one payroll + HR option for a small team. Starts around $40/month + $6/employee. (nerdwallet.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting. Starts around $50/month, with higher tiers available. (nerdwallet.com)
  • Square Payroll — great for hourly workers, contractors, and businesses already using Square. Starts at $35/month + $6/person. (forbes.com)
  • ADP RUN — strong choice if you want a more scalable, established payroll provider. Starts around $79/month + $4/employee. (nerdwallet.com)
  • Patriot Payroll — one of the cheaper options if you mainly want basic payroll. Starts around $17/month + $4/employee. (nerdwallet.com)
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll tied to HR, IT, and device management as you grow. (business.com)
  • Paychex — good for businesses that want a more full-service payroll/HR vendor. (business.com)

My quick picks:

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your business type (restaurant, retail, agency, contractor-heavy, 1–10 employees, etc.).

How do payroll platform options compare for pricing? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here’s a quick pricing comparison of popular payroll platforms (typical U.S. pricing; rates can change):

  • Gusto — about $40/mo base + $6–$12 per employee
    • Good value for small businesses
    • Easy to use, includes HR features on higher tiers
  • QuickBooks Payroll — about $50–$125/mo + $6–$10 per employee
    • Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Pricing often bundles with accounting plans
  • OnPay — about $40/mo base + $6 per employee
    • Simple flat pricing
    • Strong for SMBs, often cheaper than bigger suites
  • Square Payroll — about $35/mo + $6 per employee
    • Good for hourly/retail/restaurant businesses
    • Best if you already use Square POS
  • Rippling — usually custom pricing, often starts around $8–$12 per employee plus platform fees
    • More expensive overall, but very powerful for HR/IT/payroll together
  • ADP Runcustom pricing
    • Usually pricier than Gusto/OnPay
    • Better for larger teams or more complex payroll needs
  • Paychex Flexcustom pricing
    • Similar to ADP: flexible, but often not the cheapest
  • Deel — for contractors/global teams, pricing often starts around $49 per contractor
    • Best for international payroll, not just U.S. W-2 payroll
Cheapest common picks
  • OnPay
  • Square Payroll
  • Gusto (often best balance of price and usability)
Best for scale/compliance
  • ADP
  • Paychex
  • Rippling

If you want, I can also make a side-by-side table by business size (solo, 1–10 employees, 10–50, 50+) with the best-value option for each.

retrieval Mentioned

Here’s a quick pricing snapshot of common payroll platforms:

| Platform | Public starting price | |---|---:| | OnPay | $49/mo + $6/worker/mo (onpay.com) | | Gusto | $49/mo + $6/person/mo (Simple) (gusto.com) | | Square Payroll | $35/mo + $6/person/mo (squareup.com) | | Deel US payroll | $29/employee/mo (deel.com) | | QuickBooks Online Payroll | bundles start at $44/mo + $6.50/employee/mo for Payroll Core + Simple Start (quickbooks.intuit.com) | | Paychex Flex | custom quote (no public list price) (paychex.com) | | Rippling | custom quote (pricing not published) (rippling.com) | | ADP RUN / payroll | typically custom quote (paychex.com) |

Rule of thumb:

  • Cheapest published entry: Deel and Square. (deel.com)
  • Best “all-in-one” SMB pricing: Gusto and OnPay. (gusto.com)
  • Best if you already use accounting software: QuickBooks Payroll. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Best for larger / more complex teams: Rippling, Paychex, ADP — but you’ll need a quote. (rippling.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the cheapest option for your headcount.

Which payroll platforms are better for startups vs established companies? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here’s the short version:

Better for startups

These are usually easier, cheaper, and faster to set up:

  • Gusto — great all-around startup choice; simple payroll, benefits, and strong UX.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll plus HR, IT, and app/device management in one system.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — strong value for small teams; straightforward and affordable.
  • Square Payroll — good for hourly teams, retail, and restaurant businesses.
Better for established companies

These tend to handle complexity better: multi-state, global, compliance, reporting, and large HR teams.

  • ADP Workforce Now — solid for mid-market and enterprise; very scalable.
  • Workday Payroll — best for large enterprises already using Workday HR.
  • UKG Pro — strong for complex workforce management and scheduling.
  • Paychex Flex — good for growing companies that need more support and payroll depth.
  • Ceridian Dayforce — strong for real-time payroll and workforce management.
Simple rule of thumb
  • Startup / under ~200 employees: Gusto, Rippling, OnPay, QuickBooks Payroll
  • Growing / mid-market: Rippling, Paychex Flex, UKG Pro
  • Large / complex enterprise: ADP, Workday, Dayforce
Best picks by situation
  • Best startup overall: Gusto
  • Best if you want an all-in-one platform: Rippling
  • Best enterprise option: ADP Workforce Now or Workday Payroll

If you want, I can also give you a startup vs enterprise comparison table with pricing, ease of use, and best use cases.

retrieval Mentioned

Rule of thumb:

  • Startups / small teams: Gusto and Rippling are usually the best fit. Gusto is built for small businesses with transparent pricing and simple payroll/HR features, while Rippling is strong if you want payroll plus IT, compliance, and global hiring in one system. (gusto.com)
  • Established / larger companies: ADP is the safest default for scale and complexity, especially if you need enterprise HR, payroll, benefits, and strong compliance support. ADP explicitly positions products like Workforce Now for enterprise organizations and TotalSource for more all-in-one HR outsourcing. (adp.com)

Quick picks:

  • Best for very early-stage startups: Gusto. (gusto.com)
  • Best for fast-growing startups: Rippling. (rippling.com)
  • Best for established mid-market/enterprise: ADP. (adp.com)

If you want, I can also give you a “best payroll platform by team size” shortlist (1–10, 11–50, 51–200, 200+ employees).

What payroll platforms are best alternatives for remote teams? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best payroll platforms for remote teams depend on whether you need multi-country payroll, contractor payments, or a full EOR setup.

Top options:

  • Deel — best all-around for remote teams; great for contractors, payroll, and EOR in many countries.
  • Remote — strong for global payroll/EOR with a simple, clean admin experience.
  • Papaya Global — good for larger teams needing global payroll automation and compliance.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system, especially for mixed U.S./global teams.
  • Oyster — strong for hiring and paying international employees through EOR.
  • Gusto — best for U.S.-based remote teams; easy payroll and benefits, but limited globally.
  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP GlobalView — better for enterprise teams that want a more traditional, robust setup.
  • Multiplier — good for fast international contractor and employee payments.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Deel
  • Best simple global option: Remote
  • Best for U.S. startups: Gusto
  • Best HR + payroll combo: Rippling

If you want, I can narrow these down by team size, countries, and whether you pay employees or contractors.

retrieval Mentioned

For remote teams, the best payroll alternatives are usually:

  • Deel — best for global contractors + EOR + payroll in one place. Supports 150+ countries and is strong if you hire internationally. (deel.com)
  • Remote — best for companies that want an end-to-end global payroll stack; it says it supports 100+ countries for payroll and has HRIS, contractor management, and EOR in the same platform. (remote.com)
  • Rippling — best for teams that want payroll plus HR/IT/finance together, especially if you want one system for domestic and international workers. (rippling.com)
  • Oyster — best for distributed teams that want global payroll, EOR, and contractor management with a simpler all-in-one workflow; it supports payroll in 30+ countries and hiring in 180+ countries. (oysterhr.com)
  • Papaya Global — best for multi-country payroll operations and payroll data standardization; it emphasizes automation, compliance alerts, and global workforce visibility. (papayaglobal.com)
  • Gusto + Remote — best if your core team is US-based but you want to hire internationally without building everything yourself; Gusto’s global EOR is powered by Remote. (gusto.com)

Quick pick:

  • Mostly international remote hires: Deel or Remote. (deel.com)
  • Mostly US team, some global hires: Gusto or Rippling. (gusto.com)
  • Need the most “all-in-one” operations platform: Rippling. (rippling.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to best for startups, best for contractors, or best for 100% global payroll.

What payroll platforms are best alternatives for contractor-heavy businesses? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best payroll alternatives for contractor-heavy businesses:

  • Gusto — Best all-around for small businesses. Easy contractor payments, 1099s, good UI.
  • Deel — Best for lots of domestic + international contractors. Strong compliance and global payouts.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll + HR + device/app management in one system.
  • OnPay — Great value for businesses that pay mostly contractors and a few employees.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • ADP Run — Best for growing businesses that want a more established payroll provider.
  • Justworks — Good for payroll + benefits + compliance support, especially for mixed teams.
  • Square Payroll — Good for contractor-heavy businesses that already use Square.

Quick picks:

  • Mostly contractors: Deel or OnPay
  • Contractors + employees: Gusto or Rippling
  • Accounting-first: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Global contractors: Deel or Remote

If you want, I can narrow it down by team size, countries, and budget.

retrieval Mentioned

For contractor-heavy businesses, my shortlist is:

  • Gusto — best for mostly U.S.-based contractors; it combines contractor payments and automated 1099-NEC e-filing in one place. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll / Contractor Payments — strong if you already use QuickBooks; it offers next-day direct deposit, unlimited 1099 e-filing, and contractor self-setup. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Deel — best for international contractor-heavy teams; it supports contractors in 150+ countries and includes local contracts, classification assessments, and compliance monitoring. (deel.com)
  • Remote — good for global contractor management, especially if you want contractor invoices synced into QuickBooks. (support.remote.com)
  • Papaya Global — best for high-volume global contractor pay; it supports contractors in 180+ countries and 130+ currencies. (papayaglobal.com)
  • ADP WorkMarket — solid enterprise option for U.S. contractor operations at scale; it supports bulk onboarding, automated invoices, and 1099-NEC filing. (adp.com)

Quick rule of thumb:

  • U.S. contractors only: Gusto or QuickBooks. (gusto.com)
  • International contractors: Deel or Papaya Global. (deel.com)
  • Enterprise / complex contractor workflows: ADP WorkMarket or Rippling. (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your business size and countries.

What payroll platform options are better for multi-state payroll? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For multi-state payroll, the best platforms are usually the ones with strong tax filing, state onboarding, and local compliance support.

Best options
  • Rippling — great if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; strong for distributed teams.
  • Gusto — easiest to use for small to mid-sized businesses; good multi-state payroll support.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — one of the strongest for complex multi-state compliance and larger companies.
  • Paychex Flex — solid for multi-state payroll with good tax handling and support.
  • Paycom — strong all-in-one platform for mid-market and larger teams.
  • Workday Payroll — best for large enterprises with complex payroll needs.
  • TriNet — good if you want payroll bundled with PEO-style HR support.
Best picks by company size
  • Small business: Gusto, Rippling
  • Mid-sized: Rippling, Paychex Flex, ADP Workforce Now
  • Large/complex: ADP, Paycom, Workday
What to look for
  • Automatic state/local tax registration and filing
  • Multi-state employee onboarding
  • Support for remote workers
  • W-2s, 1099s, and year-end filings in all states
  • Good customer support for tax notices

If you tell me your company size, number of states, and whether you need HR benefits too, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

retrieval Mentioned

For multi-state payroll, the stronger options are usually:

  • Rippling — best if you want a more all-in-one platform for growing or more complex teams; Rippling says it supports automated tax compliance, filings, and registration across all 50 states. (rippling.com)
  • Gusto — best for smaller businesses that want simpler setup; Gusto says multi-state payroll is included on Plus/Premium, and it automatically calculates/files/pays federal, state, and local payroll taxes in all 50 states. (gusto.com)
  • Paychex Flex — best if you want a more service-heavy option for midsize to enterprise needs; Paychex says it offers multi-state compliance support and can automatically calculate state-specific taxes, handle registrations, and manage filings. (paychex.com)
  • ADP — best for larger or more complex organizations; ADP says its multi-state/multi-country payroll offerings centralize payroll and compliance, and its PEO can handle payroll registrations and tax filings in all states where you have employees. (adp.com)
  • OnPay — best if you want a lighter, straightforward option; OnPay says it automates employment taxes, files federal/state/local payroll taxes, and handles state reporting for new hires. (onpay.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall for multi-state complexity: Rippling. (rippling.com)
  • Best simple SMB choice: Gusto. (gusto.com)
  • Best enterprise/service-led choice: ADP or Paychex. (adp.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to best by company size, budget, or best with HR/benefits included.

Which payroll platforms are best alternatives for international payroll needs? comparison
0/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Top international payroll alternatives depend on whether you need EOR + contractor payments, multi-country payroll, or global HR + payroll. Best-known options:

  • Deel — strong for global contractor and EOR payroll, fast onboarding, broad country coverage.
  • Remote — excellent for compliant international hiring and payroll, especially for distributed teams.
  • Papaya Global — best for multi-country payroll orchestration and enterprise-grade global payments.
  • Rippling — great if you want payroll tied to HR/IT in one platform; solid for scaling teams.
  • ADP GlobalView / ADP Celergo — strong enterprise option for global payroll in large organizations.
  • Oyster — good for EOR-based international hiring with simpler UX.
  • Velocity Global — solid for employer-of-record and international workforce management.
  • Payoneer Workforce/Enterprise solutions — useful for global contractor and cross-border payouts, depending on setup.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Best overall: Deel
  • Best for global payroll ops: Papaya Global
  • Best for all-in-one HR: Rippling
  • Best enterprise choice: ADP GlobalView
  • Best simple international hiring: Remote

If you want, I can also give you a side-by-side comparison by price, country coverage, and EOR vs payroll-only.

retrieval Not mentioned

Top international payroll alternatives to consider:

  • Deel — strong all-in-one option for global payroll, contractors, and EOR; good if you want broad coverage and a polished platform. (deel.com)
  • Remote — good for teams that want a unified global HR/payroll hub with compliance-focused payroll in 100+ countries. (remote.com)
  • Oyster — solid for companies hiring internationally that want payroll plus EOR and contractor management; its payroll coverage is smaller than some peers, but it’s a strong fit for distributed teams. (oysterhr.com)
  • Papaya Global — best for larger companies needing enterprise-grade global payroll and payments, with coverage claims around 160+ countries. (remote.com)
  • Multiplier — useful if you want fast international expansion and contractor/EOR support across many countries, especially if you’re okay with a partner-network model. (deel.com)
  • ADP GlobalView — better for enterprises that want a more traditional payroll vendor with global capabilities. (oysterhr.com)

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Deel
  • Best for compliance-first global payroll: Remote
  • Best for enterprise scale: Papaya Global
  • Best for simpler global hiring: Oyster

If you want, I can narrow this down by team size, countries, and budget.

What are the best payroll platforms compared by ease of use? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here’s a practical ease-of-use ranking for popular payroll platforms:

1) Gusto

Best overall for ease of use

  • Cleanest interface
  • Very simple onboarding and payroll run process
  • Great for small businesses
  • Strong automation for taxes, benefits, and new hires
2) Rippling

Best if you want payroll + HR in one system

  • Very polished and modern
  • Easy once set up, but more powerful than Gusto
  • Best for growing teams that want lots of automation
3) QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks

  • Easy for existing QuickBooks users
  • Familiar workflow if you handle accounting in QuickBooks Online
  • Less intuitive than Gusto for first-time users
4) OnPay

Best simple payroll option for SMBs

  • Straightforward, no-frills interface
  • Easy to learn
  • Good value, especially for small teams
5) ADP Run

Best for reliability, not simplicity

  • Trusted and robust
  • Interface is more cluttered than Gusto/Rippling
  • Good support, but not the easiest UX
6) Paychex Flex

Best for larger SMBs needing flexibility

  • Solid system, but less intuitive
  • Can feel more complex than newer platforms
Quick recommendation
  • Easiest overall: Gusto
  • Best modern all-in-one: Rippling
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best simple budget option: OnPay

If you want, I can also compare them by price, features, or best for startups vs. hourly teams.

retrieval Mentioned

If your main criterion is ease of use, the strongest picks are:

  1. Gusto — usually the easiest for small businesses; G2 reviewers consistently praise its user-friendly interface and setup, and Gusto itself positions it as the benchmark for ease of use. (g2.com)
  2. Patriot Payroll — very simple and step-by-step, especially for very small teams; G2 reviewers call out its intuitive onboarding and ease of use. (g2.com)
  3. QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks; G2 data shows it scores higher for ease of use than some more complex HR suites, and users like its speed. (g2.com)
  4. RUN Powered by ADP — easier than ADP’s bigger enterprise products; G2 reviewers highlight quick implementation and strong ease-of-use scores. (g2.com)
  5. OnPay — simple and straightforward, especially for small businesses that want less clutter; G2 reviewers note its user-friendly setup and easy navigation. (g2.com)
  6. Rippling — very polished, but a bit more “platform” than “simple payroll,” since it bundles payroll with HR and IT; users still praise its intuitive interface. (g2.com)
  7. Paylocity — user-friendly, but generally better for mid-market teams than pure simplicity. (g2.com)

Best overall for ease of use: Gusto. Best ultra-simple budget pick: Patriot Payroll. Best if you already use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll. (g2.com)

If you want, I can turn this into a 2-column comparison table with pricing, best fit, and “ease-of-use score.”

What payroll platforms are best alternatives for companies that need HR features too? comparison
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Top payroll platforms with strong HR features:

  • Gusto — best for small businesses; payroll, onboarding, benefits, PTO, basic HR.
  • Rippling — best all-in-one; payroll + HR + IT/device management + app provisioning.
  • ADP Workforce Now — best for larger teams; robust payroll, HR, compliance, and reporting.
  • Paychex Flex — strong payroll with HR, benefits, and compliance tools.
  • Paylocity — good mid-market option; payroll, HR, talent, and employee engagement.
  • BambooHR + BambooHR Payroll — best HR-first choice for SMBs that want payroll added on.
  • UKG Ready — solid for scheduling, time, payroll, and HR in one system.
  • Deel — best for global hiring/payroll with contractor and employer-of-record support.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Growing company: Rippling or Paylocity
  • Enterprise: ADP or UKG
  • Global teams: Deel

If you tell me your company size and country, I can narrow it to the best 3.

retrieval Mentioned

If you need payroll + HR in one system, the strongest alternatives are usually:

  • Rippling — best if you want a single employee-data platform where HR changes flow into payroll automatically. Good for companies that want HR, IT, and payroll together. (rippling.com)
  • Gusto — best for small and mid-sized businesses that want easy payroll plus HR, benefits, onboarding, time, and compliance tools. (gusto.com)
  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP small-business HR — best for companies that want a more scalable HR/payroll suite with benefits, time tracking, compliance, reporting, and advisory support. (adp.com)
  • Paychex Flex — best if you want payroll, HR, benefits, and support in one platform, especially for growing businesses. (paychex.com)
  • BambooHR + Payroll — best if HR is the priority and you want payroll tightly connected to an HRIS and benefits admin. (bamboohr.com)

Quick pick:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Fast-growing / more complex ops: Rippling
  • More traditional enterprise-grade option: ADP
  • Need strong service + all-in-one: Paychex
  • HR-first teams: BambooHR

If you want, I can narrow this to the best 3 for your company size, budget, and whether you need benefits, hiring, or time tracking.

How do I fix payroll tax filing errors in a payroll platform? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To fix payroll tax filing errors in a payroll platform:

  1. Identify the error type
    • Wrong employee SSN/EIN
    • Incorrect wages/tax withholding
    • Wrong filing period or state/local jurisdiction
    • Missing deposit/payment
    • E-file rejected by agency
  2. Check the payroll platform’s correction tools
    • In Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, ADP, and Paychex, look for:
      • Amended return
      • Void/reissue payroll
      • Tax adjustment
      • Agency notice/reject resolution
  3. Fix the source data
    • Correct employee profile, tax setup, work location, and withholding elections.
    • Update employer tax accounts, filing frequencies, and state registrations if needed.
  4. Run the correction
    • If payroll was filed incorrectly, file an amended return (for example, corrected 941/941-X or state equivalent).
    • If it was just a calculation issue, do a tax adjustment in the next payroll.
  5. Pay any balance due or request a refund
    • Make the missing deposit/payment right away.
    • If overpaid, follow the agency’s refund or credit process.
  6. Contact support or a payroll tax specialist
    • If the filing was already accepted by the IRS/state, ask the platform to help submit the correction.
    • For complex cases, use a payroll service like ADP Run, Gusto Complete, or Paychex Flex with tax-filing support.

If you tell me which platform you use and what the error message says, I can give exact steps.

retrieval Mentioned

Fixing payroll tax filing errors usually means:

  1. Identify the exact error
    • Wrong employee SSN/EIN
    • Wrong wages or tax amounts
    • Wrong filing period or quarter
    • Duplicate filing
    • Missing state/local registration
    • Incorrect jurisdiction or work location
  2. Stop or pause the next filing
    • If the platform has an auto-file setting, pause it while you correct the data.
  3. Correct the source data
    • Employee profile
    • Tax setup
    • Work locations
    • Filing calendars
    • Pay runs that fed the bad return
  4. Amend the filing
    • Many payroll platforms let you file an amended return or corrected return.
    • If not, you may need to file directly with the tax agency.
  5. Reconcile payments
    • Make sure what was withheld, paid, and filed all match.
    • Check for underpayment, overpayment, or duplicate payment.
  6. Contact the payroll provider
    • Ask support to identify:
      • which return was filed
      • what data was used
      • whether they can void, amend, or refile it
  7. Notify the tax agency if needed
    • If a filing was accepted with wrong info, the agency may require a correction form.
  8. Document everything
    • Keep screenshots, filing confirmations, corrected reports, and support tickets.

If you want, I can give you a step-by-step fix for a specific platform like Gusto, ADP, Paychex, QuickBooks Payroll, or Rippling.

How do I run payroll for hourly employees? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here’s the basic process for running payroll for hourly employees:

  1. Track hours
    • Use a time clock, timesheets, or scheduling software.
    • Make sure you capture regular hours, overtime, breaks, PTO, and sick time.
  2. Calculate gross pay
    • Hourly pay = hours worked × hourly rate
    • Add overtime at the correct rate (usually 1.5x after 40 hours/week in the U.S., unless your state says otherwise).
  3. Apply deductions
    • Taxes: federal, state, local
    • Pre-tax items: health insurance, retirement contributions, HSA/FSA
    • Post-tax items: garnishments, some benefits
  4. Send net pay
    • Pay by direct deposit, paper check, or pay card.
    • Keep a pay stub showing hours, rates, deductions, and net pay.
  5. File payroll taxes
    • Deposit withholding and employer taxes on time.
    • File required forms (like 941, state unemployment, W-2s, etc. in the U.S.).
  6. Keep records
    • Store timesheets, payroll reports, tax filings, and employee forms.
Easiest way to do it

If you don’t want to calculate everything manually, use payroll software like:

  • Gusto — great for small businesses
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks
  • ADP Run — solid for growing teams
  • Rippling — strong for HR + payroll together
  • Paychex Flex — good full-service option
Simple payroll workflow

Collect hours → approve time → run payroll → pay employees → file taxes → archive reports

If you want, I can also give you:

  • a step-by-step payroll checklist
  • a Google Sheets payroll template
  • or a U.S.-specific payroll guide.
retrieval Not mentioned

Here’s the basic flow for running payroll for hourly employees in the U.S.: (eitc.irs.gov)

  1. Track hours worked each pay period. Pay for all hours worked, and make sure nonexempt hourly employees get overtime at 1.5× regular pay after 40 hours in a workweek unless a state/local rule is stricter. (beta.dol.gov)
  2. Calculate gross pay = regular hours × hourly rate + overtime + any bonuses, commissions, or other extra pay that apply. (beta.dol.gov)
  3. Get the employee’s Form W-4 and use it to figure federal income tax withholding. (irs.gov)
  4. Withhold payroll taxes: federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare; also any required state/local taxes. (irs.gov)
  5. Pay the net amount to the employee by direct deposit, check, or your normal pay method. (irs.gov)
  6. Deposit employment taxes with the IRS on the required schedule (monthly or semiweekly, depending on your tax liability). (eitc.irs.gov)
  7. File payroll returns and issue forms like quarterly Form 941 and year-end Forms W-2/W-3 as required. (eitc.irs.gov)
  8. Keep payroll records of hours, wages, and withholdings. The FLSA requires recordkeeping. (dol.gov)

If you want, I can turn this into a simple payroll checklist or show you how to calculate one hourly paycheck with an example.

How do I set up direct deposit for employees? problem 40/mo
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To set up direct deposit for employees:

  1. Choose a payroll provider
    • Good options: Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, ADP Run, or Rippling.
  2. Collect employee banking info
    • Have each employee complete a direct deposit form with:
      • Bank name
      • Routing number
      • Account number
      • Account type (checking/savings)
    • Best practice: ask for a voided check or a bank letter to verify details.
  3. Get signed authorization
    • Employees must sign a direct deposit authorization form.
  4. Enter the info into payroll
    • Add the employee’s bank details in your payroll software.
    • If you use Gusto or QuickBooks Payroll, this is usually done in the employee profile.
  5. Run a test payroll
    • Make a small first deposit or run payroll early the first time to confirm it works.
  6. Set payroll timing
    • Submit payroll early enough for the bank’s processing window, usually 2–4 business days before payday.
  7. Keep records secure
    • Store banking info and forms securely; limit access to payroll admins only.

If you want, I can give you:

  • a free direct deposit authorization form template, or
  • step-by-step setup for a specific payroll service like Gusto or QuickBooks Payroll.
retrieval Mentioned

Set it up in 6 steps:

  1. Choose a payroll method

Use a payroll provider or your bank’s business payroll service.

  1. Get employee authorization

Have each employee sign a direct deposit consent form.

  1. Collect banking info

Ask for:

  • bank name
  • account type: checking or savings
  • routing number
  • account number
  • deposit amount: full amount or split deposit
  1. Verify the account

Many employers use a voided check or a small test deposit.

  1. Enter the info into payroll

Add the employee’s bank details in your payroll software or bank portal.

  1. Run a test payroll

Confirm the deposit posts correctly before using it for regular pay.

Best practices

  • Keep banking info encrypted and restricted.
  • Ask for changes only in writing.
  • Set a cutoff date for edits before payday.
  • Keep paper forms in a secure file.

If you want, I can give you:

  • a direct deposit authorization form
  • a step-by-step setup for QuickBooks, Gusto, ADP, or Paychex.
How do I handle payroll for contractors and employees? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Use separate workflows for employees vs contractors:

Employees
  • Run payroll on a schedule (weekly/biweekly/semi-monthly).
  • Withhold income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and any state/local taxes.
  • Pay employer payroll taxes.
  • File year-end forms like W-2s.
Contractors
  • Usually don’t withhold taxes.
  • Pay them the agreed amount by invoice or through contractor payroll.
  • Collect a W-9 before paying.
  • Issue 1099-NEC if they meet reporting thresholds.
Best way to manage both

Use payroll software that handles both in one place:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small businesses
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks accounting
  • Rippling — better for larger teams / HR + payroll together
  • Deel — strong for international contractors and employees
Simple setup
  1. Classify workers correctly.
  2. Collect W-4s for employees, W-9s for contractors.
  3. Set pay schedules and payment method.
  4. Run payroll, remit taxes, and save records.
  5. Send W-2s/1099s at year-end.

If you want, I can recommend the best option for your business size and country.

retrieval Not mentioned

In the U.S., the key is to classify workers correctly first: employees are covered by payroll withholding rules; independent contractors generally are not. The IRS uses common-law control factors, and the DOL also looks at whether the worker is economically dependent or in business for themself. A contract label alone doesn’t decide the status. (irs.gov)

Employees

  • Get an EIN if you have employees. (irs.gov)
  • Collect Form W-4 and run payroll each pay period. Withhold federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare taxes, then deposit them and file employment tax returns. (irs.gov)
  • Give employees Form W-2 after year-end and file it with SSA. (irs.gov)

Contractors

  • Usually do not withhold payroll taxes from their pay. (irs.gov)
  • Collect Form W-9 before paying them. If you pay $600+ for services in the course of your business, you generally issue Form 1099-NEC. (irs.gov)

Best practice

  1. Decide worker status before paying.
  2. Keep separate processes for W-2 employees and 1099 contractors.
  3. Use payroll software or a payroll service if you want deposits, filings, and forms automated.
  4. Check your state payroll/tax rules too. (irs.gov)

If you want, I can give you a simple payroll checklist for a small business.

How do I manage payroll tax withholdings for multiple states? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To manage payroll tax withholdings for multiple states:

  1. Determine the employee’s tax states
    • Work state, home state, and any state where they have nexus/are subject to withholding.
    • Check reciprocity agreements (e.g., some border states).
  2. Register in each required state
    • Set up state withholding accounts before paying employees there.
    • Also register for unemployment insurance where needed.
  3. Set up payroll by employee location
    • Use the employee’s work location, tax home, and residency rules to calculate the correct withholding.
    • Recheck when employees move or become remote.
  4. Automate calculations and filings
    • Best options: Gusto, ADP Run, Paychex Flex, or Rippling for multi-state payroll.
    • For larger teams, ADP Workforce Now is common.
  5. Track local taxes too
    • Some cities/counties have extra withholding rules.
    • Don’t forget local earned income taxes (e.g., Philadelphia, NYC).
  6. Review nexus and remote work rules
    • A single remote employee can create tax filing obligations in another state.
    • Monitor these regularly.
  7. File and remit on time
    • Maintain each state’s deposit schedule and quarterly/annual returns.
    • Use a calendar or payroll provider reminders.
  8. Keep employee forms updated
    • Collect state withholding forms where applicable (e.g., state equivalents of W-4s).

If you want, I can give you a state-by-state checklist or recommend the best payroll software for your business size.

retrieval Not mentioned

Managing multi-state payroll tax withholding usually means doing three things for each employee:

  1. Identify the right states

Usually this depends on where the employee lives and where they physically work. Check whether the states have a reciprocity agreement; if they do, withholding may go only to the employee’s home state. Always verify with the relevant state tax agencies. (irs.gov)

  1. Register and collect the right forms

You’ll generally need to register for withholding accounts in each state where you owe tax, then collect the employee’s federal Form W-4 and any required state withholding form/certificate. The IRS says to contact the state tax department for state withholding rules. (irs.gov)

  1. Withhold, file, and reconcile by state

Track wages by work location/state, apply the correct state rate/table, then file the required quarterly/annual returns and W-2 state reporting. If you have employees in more than one state, federal unemployment filing can also require Schedule A (Multi-State Employer) on Form 940. (irs.gov)

Practical tip: use payroll software or a payroll provider that supports multi-state withholding, especially if employees travel, move, or work remotely across state lines.

If you want, I can give you a state-by-state checklist or a setup flow for remote employees.

How do I automate payroll for a small business? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To automate payroll for a small business, use a payroll platform that handles employee data, tax withholding, direct deposit, pay runs, and filings.

Good options
  • Gusto — easiest for small businesses; great UI, tax filing, benefits
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting
  • ADP RUN — solid for growing teams; strong compliance support
  • Paychex Flex — good for HR + payroll bundle
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + IT + HR automation together
How to set it up
  1. Choose a payroll provider
    • Pick based on your accounting software, number of employees, and whether you need HR features.
  2. Enter employee info
    • Name, address, SSN/ID, tax forms, pay rate/salary, bank details for direct deposit.
  3. Set pay schedules
    • Weekly, biweekly, semimonthly, or monthly.
  4. Connect time tracking
    • Use When I Work, Homebase, or built-in time tracking if hourly staff need it.
  5. Configure taxes and deductions
    • Federal/state/local taxes, benefits, garnishments, retirement, etc.
  6. Run a test payroll
    • Check gross pay, net pay, and tax calculations before the first live run.
  7. Turn on auto-payroll
    • Some systems let you auto-run payroll if hours and salaries are unchanged.
  8. Sync with accounting
    • Connect to QuickBooks Online, Xero, or your general ledger.
  9. Set reminders and approvals
    • Keep a human approval step before finalizing payroll.
Best simple setup

If you want the easiest path:

  • Gusto + QuickBooks Online + Homebase

or

  • QuickBooks Payroll if you already use QuickBooks
Watch out for
  • Employee classification (W-2 vs contractor)
  • State tax registrations
  • Overtime rules
  • Benefits deductions
  • Year-end forms like W-2s and 1099s

If you tell me your state, number of employees, and whether they’re hourly or salaried, I can recommend the best payroll tool for your setup.

retrieval Mentioned

To automate payroll for a small business:

  1. Pick payroll software
    • Common options: Gusto, ADP, QuickBooks Payroll, Paychex, OnPay.
    • Choose based on your size, state tax support, benefits, and bookkeeping setup.
  2. Set up employee data
    • Legal name, address, SSN/ITIN
    • Pay rate or salary
    • Pay schedule
    • Tax forms and withholding info
    • Direct deposit details
  3. Connect tax and bank accounts
    • Link your business checking account
    • Enable federal/state payroll tax filing and payment
    • Register with state agencies if required
  4. Define payroll rules
    • Hourly vs salary
    • Overtime rules
    • PTO, bonuses, commissions
    • Garnishments, deductions, benefits
  5. Automate time tracking
    • Use a time clock or integrate tools like TSheets/QuickBooks Time, Homebase, or When I Work.
    • Sync hours directly into payroll.
  6. Run payroll on a schedule
    • Weekly, biweekly, or semimonthly
    • Use auto-run if hours are approved and fixed salaries are set
  7. Automate tax filing and payments
    • Have the provider file and pay payroll taxes
    • Set reminders or auto-debit for tax deposits
  8. Add employee self-service
    • Let employees view pay stubs, update info, and download W-2s/1099s
  9. Review reports regularly
    • Labor cost
    • Tax liabilities
    • PTO balances
    • Compliance alerts
  10. Keep a manual check process for exceptions
    • New hires, terminations, bonuses, corrections, and off-cycle payroll

If you want, I can help you choose the best payroll tool based on:

  • number of employees
  • your state
  • hourly vs salaried staff
  • whether you need benefits or contractor payments.
How do I avoid payroll mistakes when processing paychecks? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To avoid payroll mistakes, use a tight process and good software.

Best practices
  • Use payroll software: It reduces manual math and tax errors.
  • Keep employee data current: Pay rate, withholding, bank info, overtime status.
  • Set a payroll calendar: Deadlines for timecards, approvals, and pay dates.
  • Require manager approval for hours, bonuses, and PTO before running payroll.
  • Reconcile every run: Compare gross pay, deductions, taxes, and net pay.
  • Track time accurately: Use a time clock instead of handwritten entries.
  • Review tax filings regularly to avoid missed deposits or incorrect withholdings.
  • Separate duties if possible: one person enters payroll, another reviews it.
  • Keep records for wages, tax forms, and changes to employee status.
Good payroll products
  • Gusto — great for small businesses, easy setup, strong automation
  • ADP Run — reliable if you want a more established provider
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
  • Rippling — strong for payroll plus HR and IT
  • OnTheClock or Homebase — good time tracking for hourly teams
Common mistakes to watch for
  • Wrong pay rate
  • Missed overtime
  • Incorrect tax withholding
  • Duplicate employees
  • Missing PTO or unpaid leave adjustments
  • Bad bank account or direct deposit info

If you want, I can also give you a simple payroll checklist you can use every pay period.

retrieval Not mentioned

Use a tight checklist and a two-person review if possible:

  • Keep employee data current: W-4, bank info, address, tax status, deductions.
  • Use a consistent payroll calendar: lock cutoffs for hours, bonuses, PTO, and changes.
  • Verify timekeeping: compare timesheets, overtime, missed punches, and approvals.
  • Review new hires/terminations carefully: start/end dates, final pay, benefits, and PTO payout rules.
  • Double-check deductions and taxes: health, retirement, garnishments, local taxes, and state rules.
  • Run a pre-submit audit: spot outliers like unusually high pay, zero pay, duplicate employees, or missing hours.
  • Reconcile every payroll: compare payroll register to prior period and general ledger.
  • Document exceptions: bonuses, off-cycle checks, corrections, and manual overrides.
  • Use payroll software alerts: many systems flag negative net pay, missing tax IDs, or duplicate entries.
  • Stay on top of compliance: tax deadlines, minimum wage, overtime, and state/local payroll laws.

If you want, I can turn this into a one-page payroll processing checklist.

How do I track PTO in a payroll platform? problem
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Track PTO in a payroll platform by setting up a time-off policy, then having employees request PTO and managers approve it so it flows into payroll.

Typical setup
  1. Create PTO policy
    • Vacation, sick, personal time, etc.
    • Define accrual rate or front-loading
    • Set carryover and caps
  2. Set up PTO bank
    • Link PTO types to each employee or group
    • Make sure balances update automatically
  3. Configure approvals
    • Manager or HR approval workflow
    • Optional blackout dates or notice rules
  4. Connect to payroll
    • Approved PTO should reduce available balance
    • Depending on your rules, it may be:
      • Paid time off: included in payroll hours
      • Unpaid time off: excluded from pay
  5. Use reporting
    • Track balances, requests, approvals, and liability
    • Run PTO reports for audits and forecasting
In popular platforms
  • Gusto: Time off policies + employee requests + payroll sync
  • Rippling: PTO tracking tied to HR and payroll automatically
  • ADP: Time and attendance tools for PTO accruals and approvals
  • QuickBooks Payroll: Time off settings and payroll integration
  • Paychex Flex: PTO accrual tracking and manager approvals
Best practice

Use the platform as the source of truth so PTO doesn’t get tracked in spreadsheets and payroll separately.

If you want, I can give you the exact steps for a specific platform like Gusto, ADP, Rippling, or QuickBooks Payroll.

retrieval Mentioned

Usually you track PTO like this:

  1. Set up PTO policies
    • Accrual rules: hourly, per pay period, monthly, or annual grant
    • Carryover limits
    • Waiting periods
    • Separate buckets: vacation, sick, personal, unpaid leave
  2. Create PTO balances
    • Start each employee with the correct opening balance
    • Sync with hire dates and tenure rules if needed
  3. Record requests and approvals
    • Employee submits time off request
    • Manager approves/denies
    • Approved PTO reduces the balance automatically
  4. Integrate with payroll
    • PTO hours should flow into the pay run as paid time, not worked time
    • Make sure overtime rules don’t count PTO hours as hours worked
  5. Reconcile each pay period
    • Compare PTO taken vs. accrued vs. remaining
    • Check for negative balances or missed entries
  6. Export reports
    • PTO liability report
    • Employee balance report
    • PTO usage by department

If you want, I can also show you:

  • a simple PTO tracking workflow
  • how to do it in Gusto, ADP, Paychex, or QuickBooks Payroll
  • or a spreadsheet template for PTO tracking.
How do I pay salaried employees accurately each cycle? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

To pay salaried employees accurately each cycle:

  1. Use a payroll system
    • Good options: Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll, ADP Run, Rippling, Paychex Flex.
    • These handle salary proration, taxes, deductions, and direct deposit.
  2. Keep employee records current
    • Salary amount
    • Pay schedule
    • Tax forms (W-4, state forms)
    • Benefit deductions
    • PTO policy
    • Bank info
  3. Define the pay period and cutoff date
    • Example: “Pay period ends Friday, payroll submitted Monday, paid Friday.”
    • Lock changes after cutoff to avoid errors.
  4. Check for salary proration
    • For new hires, terminations, unpaid leave, or schedule changes, prorate based on days/hours per your policy and local law.
    • Keep a written formula so it’s consistent.
  5. Review deductions every cycle
    • Federal/state taxes
    • Health insurance
    • 401(k)
    • HSA/FSA
    • Garnishments
    • PTO or unpaid leave adjustments
  6. Run a payroll preview
    • Compare current gross pay vs prior cycle.
    • Flag unusual changes: zero checks, big swings, missing deductions.
  7. Approve and pay on time
    • Submit payroll before bank cutoff.
    • Use direct deposit for consistency.
  8. Reconcile after payroll
    • Match payroll reports to bank withdrawals.
    • Save reports for audit/tax purposes.
  9. Do quarterly/annual checks
    • Verify tax filings, W-2s, and benefit balances.
    • Audit salary changes and employee classifications.

If you want, I can give you a simple salaried payroll checklist or recommend the best payroll software for your company size.

retrieval Not mentioned

To pay salaried employees accurately each cycle:

  1. First classify them correctly
    • If they’re exempt salaried, they generally get their full salary for any week they perform work, regardless of hours worked, with limited deductions allowed. (dol.gov)
    • If they’re nonexempt salaried, you still pay a salary, but you must track hours and pay overtime at 1.5× the regular rate after 40 hours in a workweek. (webapps.dol.gov)
  2. Use the correct pay-period salary amount
    • Annual salary ÷ number of pay periods = gross salary each cycle.
    • For exempt employees, don’t reduce pay just because they worked fewer hours in a partial week, except for permitted deductions. (dol.gov)
  3. Handle proration carefully
    • For new hires, terminations, unpaid leave, or approved deductions, prorate only when the law allows it. (dol.gov)
  4. Run taxes and deductions from payroll rules, not guesswork
    • Withhold federal income tax using the employee’s Form W-4 and IRS withholding methods for the payroll period. (irs.gov)
    • Also withhold Social Security and Medicare taxes, and apply wage-base / additional Medicare rules when applicable. (irs.gov)
  5. Reconcile every cycle
    • Check: salary amount, hours worked (if nonexempt), PTO/unpaid time, bonuses/commissions, deductions, taxes, and net pay.
    • Keep accurate payroll records; the FLSA requires wage and hour records, including basis of pay and additions/deductions. (dol.gov)

Simple formula

  • Gross pay = salary for the period
  • + overtime (if nonexempt)
  • + bonuses/commissions
  • pre-tax deductions
  • taxes
  • post-tax deductions

= net pay

If you want, I can give you a payroll checklist or a worked example for weekly, biweekly, or semimonthly salaried pay.

How do I correct a missed payroll deposit? problem
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Mentioned

If a payroll deposit was missed, act fast:

  1. Identify the type of deposit
    • Employee direct deposit: employee wasn’t paid.
    • Payroll tax deposit: IRS/state payroll tax payment was missed.
  2. Fix it immediately
    • For employee pay: issue an off-cycle payroll or manual check right away.
    • For tax deposits: make the payment ASAP through the agency portal and record it correctly.
  3. Correct your payroll records
    • Re-run payroll if needed.
    • Reverse any duplicate entries.
    • Update liability accounts and pay dates.
  4. Notify anyone affected
    • Tell the employee what happened and when they’ll be paid.
    • If it’s a tax deposit, expect possible interest/penalties and resolve them promptly.
  5. Check the root cause
    • Bad bank info, payroll cutoff missed, insufficient funds, or software setup issue.

If you use software like QuickBooks Payroll, Gusto, or ADP, look for:

  • Off-cycle payroll
  • Void/reissue payment
  • Payroll tax payment correction

If you tell me whether it was employee direct deposit or tax deposit, and what payroll system you use, I can give the exact steps.

retrieval Not mentioned

If you mean a missed payroll tax deposit (federal withholding/Social Security/Medicare/FUTA), do this:

  1. Make the deposit immediately through EFTPS in the correct amount and for the right tax period. The IRS charges a failure-to-deposit penalty when deposits are late, short, or made the wrong way. (irs.gov)
  2. Reconcile your payroll records and Form 941/944 so the liability matches the deposit. (eitc.irs.gov)
  3. If the IRS assesses a penalty, ask for penalty relief if you had reasonable cause; you may be able to request it by phone or with Form 843. Lack of funds alone usually does not qualify. (irs.gov)
  4. If a payroll provider caused the miss, correct it right away and document everything; the IRS says employers should investigate missed or late payments immediately. (irs.gov)

If you mean an employee’s paycheck/direct deposit was missed, the fix is different: pay the employee ASAP, document the error, and check your state wage-payment rules. The DOL says employers must pay wages owed on time, and workers can contact Wage and Hour if they’re unpaid. (dol.gov)

If you want, I can give you a step-by-step fix for your exact case: missed tax deposit, missed employee direct deposit, or 941 correction.

How much does a payroll platform cost per employee? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

It depends on the platform and what’s included, but small-business payroll software often runs about $5–$15 per employee per month, plus a base monthly fee.

Common examples:

  • Gusto: about $40/month + $6/employee
  • QuickBooks Payroll: often $50–$150/month + $6–$12/employee depending on plan
  • ADP RUN: usually custom pricing, often roughly $60–$150+ /month + per-employee fees
  • Paychex Flex: typically custom pricing, often similar to ADP
  • Rippling: generally custom pricing, often starts around $8–$12/employee/month for payroll-related modules

If you want, I can compare the cheapest payroll platforms for 1–10 employees or 10+ employees.

retrieval Mentioned

A typical SMB payroll platform costs about $6–$12 per employee per month, plus a monthly base fee. (gusto.com)

Examples:

  • Gusto: $49/mo + $6/person (Simple), $80/mo + $12/person (Plus), $180/mo + $22/person (Premium). (gusto.com)
  • OnPay: $49/mo + $6/person. (help.onpay.com)
  • QuickBooks Online Payroll: starts at +$6.50/employee per month on the pricing page. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Rippling: pricing is modular; one Rippling page says payroll adds on to a core platform starting at $8/employee/month, with payroll priced separately. (rippling.com)

So the short answer is: budget roughly $6–$15 per employee per month for a basic payroll platform, before add-ons and base fees. (gusto.com)

If you want, I can also give you a cost estimate for your team size.

What is the cheapest payroll platform for small businesses? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

The cheapest popular payroll platform for many small businesses is usually Patriot Payroll.

  • Patriot Payroll: starts around $17/month + $4/employee
  • Good for: very small teams, simple payroll, low cost

Other low-cost options:

  • Square Payroll: about $35/month + $6/employee
  • Best if you already use Square for POS
  • Wave Payroll: often $40/month + $6/employee
  • Good for very small businesses, but availability/features vary by state

Bottom line: If you want the lowest general monthly price, go with Patriot Payroll. If you want something more polished/easier to grow with, Gusto is better but usually costs more.

If you want, I can rank the cheapest payroll platforms by total cost for 1, 5, or 10 employees.

retrieval Mentioned

For a typical small business with W-2 employees, Patriot Basic Payroll looks like the cheapest mainstream option I found: $17/month + $4 per worker paid. (patriotsoftware.com)

If you want fully managed tax filing, Patriot’s Full Service Payroll is $37/month + $5 per worker, which is still cheaper than many competitors. (patriotsoftware.com)

For comparison, OnPay is $49/month + $6/person, Gusto Simple is $49/month + $6/person, and QuickBooks Payroll starts at $45/month + $6/employee. (help.onpay.com)

If you want, I can give you the cheapest payroll platform based on your exact headcount (e.g. 1, 3, 10 employees).

Is there a free payroll platform for small businesses? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Yes—but truly free full-service payroll is rare.

A few options to look at:

  • Payroll4Free — free for businesses with up to 25 employees; basic payroll, tax forms, direct deposit.
  • Homebase — free plan for scheduling/time tracking; payroll is paid add-on.
  • Wave Payroll — payroll is a paid product, but Wave accounting is free.
  • Odoo Payroll — part of Odoo’s business suite; can be low-cost/free depending on setup and apps used, but not usually plug-and-play.
  • Excel + IRS/state tools — effectively free if you’re willing to do payroll manually, but it’s easy to make tax mistakes.

If you want, I can also give you the best free/lowest-cost payroll option based on your state and number of employees.

retrieval Mentioned

Not really for ongoing payroll. Most small-business payroll platforms charge a monthly base fee and/or per-employee fee. For example, Gusto starts at $49/month + $6/person/month, and Wave’s U.S. payroll is $40/month + $6 per active employee/month after its trial. (gusto.com)

What you can get is:

  • Free trial / free setup: Gusto offers free account setup before you run payroll, and Wave offers a 30-day free payroll trial. (gusto.com)
  • Limited free accounting, not payroll: Wave’s accounting/invoicing is free, but payroll is paid. (waveapps.com)

If you want, I can list the cheapest payroll options for 1–5 employees.

What payroll platforms have free trials? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A few payroll platforms that often offer free trials are:

  • OnPay — typically a 30-day free trial
  • Patriot Payroll — typically a 30-day free trial
  • QuickBooks Payroll — sometimes offers a 30-day trial / promo
  • Wave Payroll — often free to start or promo-based, depending on region

Many others, like Gusto, Rippling, ADP, and Justworks, usually offer demo calls rather than a true free trial.

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best free-trial payroll platforms for small business, contractors, or startups.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are some payroll platforms that currently offer a free trial or free-start offer:

  • OnPay30-day free trial with full access and no strings attached. (onpay.com)
  • CheckMark Online Payroll14-day free trial; no credit card required. CheckMark also has a separate 60-day free trial offer on its download page. (checkmark.com)
  • Roll by ADP — free trial available; ADP also says eligible U.S. businesses can get free payroll for a limited time. (rollbyadp.com)
  • Patriot Software Payroll30-day free, no-obligation trial. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Gusto — free account setup, and you don’t pay until you run payroll; Gusto also offers a free trial for some add-ons like Time & Attendance Plus. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — offers a 30-day free trial per Intuit’s offer terms. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • greytHR7-day free trial with enterprise features. (greythr.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to:

  1. best for small businesses,
  2. best free trial with no credit card, or
  3. best payroll software for the U.S.
What payroll platforms have transparent pricing? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

A few payroll platforms with public, transparent pricing:

  • Gusto — plans/pricing are published online.
  • OnPay — simple published monthly pricing.
  • Patriot Payroll — clear base pricing on the site.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — public tiered pricing.
  • Square Payroll — published flat-rate pricing.
  • Wave Payroll — pricing is posted, though it varies by state.

If you want the most straightforward pricing, I’d start with OnPay, Patriot Payroll, or Square Payroll.

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the cheapest options,
  2. the best for small businesses, or
  3. a side-by-side pricing comparison.
retrieval Mentioned

Here are payroll platforms with public, transparent pricing:

  • Gusto — pricing is publicly listed; current plans start around $49/mo + $6/person and go up by tier. (gusto.com)
  • OnPay — clearly states no hidden fees; starts at $49 base + $6/worker per month. (onpay.com)
  • Wave Payroll — public pricing page: $40 USD base + $6 per active employee + $6 per contractor paid. (waveapps.com)
  • Patriot Software — public pricing page; payroll is a flat monthly fee plus per-worker fee ($4 Basic / $5 Full Service per worker), with extra-state fees disclosed. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll — public pricing page with listed bundle prices, e.g. $44/mo + $6.50/employee for one bundle and $62.50/mo + $6.50/employee for another. (quickbooks.intuit.com)

If you want, I can also give you the best transparent-pricing option for small business vs. contractor-only vs. multi-state payroll.

What payroll platforms are best value for the money? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Best value payroll platforms usually depend on team size:

Best overall value

Gusto

  • Great for small businesses
  • Easy payroll, tax filing, benefits, and solid UI
  • Usually the best mix of price + features
Cheapest for basic payroll

Square Payroll

  • Strong if you already use Square
  • Simple, low-friction payroll for small teams
  • Good for hourly workers and contractors
Best for growing SMBs

Rippling

  • More expensive, but excellent if you want payroll + HR + IT in one place
  • Best value when you’ll actually use the extra modules
Best for very small teams

OnPay

  • Often one of the best pure-payroll values
  • Good support, simple pricing, good for small businesses with contractors too
Best for contractor-heavy businesses

Patriot Payroll

  • Low-cost, straightforward
  • Good if you want to keep payroll software cheap and simple
Best if you need accounting integration

QuickBooks Payroll

  • Best value if you already use QuickBooks Online
  • Convenient, though not always the cheapest standalone option
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best budget: Patriot Payroll
  • Best simple payroll: OnPay
  • Best if you use Square: Square Payroll
  • Best all-in-one growth platform: Rippling

If you tell me your number of employees, contractors, and whether you need HR/benefits, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

retrieval Mentioned

Best value depends on what you need:

  • Best overall value: Gusto Simple — $49/mo + $6/person, with unlimited payrolls, tax filings, and basic PTO/holiday pay. (gusto.com)
  • Best pure low-cost payroll: Patriot Basic Payroll — $17/mo + $4/worker, or Full Service at $37/mo + $5/worker if you want tax filings handled. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Best if you also use time tracking/scheduling: Homebase Payroll — $39/mo + $6/active employee, and it pairs with Homebase’s scheduling/time tools. (joinhomebase.com)
  • Best for Square sellers: Square Payroll — $35/mo + $6/person, with clean integration if you already run your business on Square. (squareup.com)
  • Best “all-in-one HR + payroll” value: Gusto Plus — $80/mo + $12/person, if you need multi-state payroll, time tracking, and more HR depth. (gusto.com)

For a 10-person team, rough monthly totals are: Patriot Basic $57, Patriot Full Service $87, Square $95, Homebase $99, Gusto Simple/OnPay $109.

If you want, I can also rank these by cheapest, best for restaurants, or best for multi-state payroll.

How much is payroll software for a small team? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

For a small team, payroll software usually costs about $20–$150/month base fee + $4–$15 per employee/month.

Typical examples:

  • Gusto: starts around $40/month + $6/person
  • QuickBooks Payroll: often $45–$125/month + $5–$10/person
  • Rippling: usually custom pricing, often higher, but good if you want HR + payroll
  • OnPay: about $40/month + $6/person
  • ADP Run: custom, often pricier but very full-featured

Rough total cost:

  • 1–5 employees: about $40–$100/month
  • 6–10 employees: about $70–$180/month
  • 11–20 employees: about $100–$300/month

Extra costs may include:

  • Year-end tax forms
  • Direct deposit
  • Contractor payments
  • Time tracking / HR add-ons
  • State tax filings in some states

If you want, I can recommend the cheapest, best all-around, or best for hourly employees option.

retrieval Mentioned

For a small team, payroll software usually runs about $50–$150/month plus about $5–$12 per employee/month. (gusto.com)

Examples for 5 employees:

If you want, I can give you a quick best-value shortlist for your team size and whether you need HR, benefits, or contractor-only payroll.

What payroll platforms charge per payroll run? transactional
1/2 mention 2 responses
recall Not mentioned

Most modern payroll SaaS tools don’t charge strictly per payroll run—they usually charge a monthly base + per-employee fee.

Platforms that commonly do have per-payroll-run / per-processing fees (often by quote, not always public) include:

  • ADP (RUN / Workforce Now)
  • Paychex Flex
  • Paylocity
  • Paycom
  • Dayforce (Ceridian)

For smaller businesses, outsourced payroll bureaus are also often billed per payroll processed.

If you want, I can also list:

  1. true per-run pricing options,
  2. best flat-rate payroll platforms, or
  3. the cheapest payroll platforms for small teams.
retrieval Mentioned

Most mainstream payroll SaaS do not charge per payroll run; they usually charge a monthly base fee plus per-employee fee, with unlimited runs. Examples: Gusto, OnPay, Patriot, and SurePayroll all say unlimited payroll runs/off-cycle payrolls are included. (gusto.com)

A clear example of a platform that does charge per run is PeopleGuru: its pricing/service sheet lists “Additional Payroll Runs … $100 per run.” (legal.peopleguru.com)

So the short answer is: per-run pricing is uncommon in modern SMB payroll software; it shows up more in service-bureau/custom payroll arrangements than in standard SaaS plans. (gusto.com)

If you want, I can make you a list of payroll platforms that explicitly say unlimited runs vs. per-run fees.

What payroll platforms include tax filing in the price? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Several payroll platforms include automatic payroll tax filing and payment in their standard price:

  • Gusto — tax filings and payments included with all payroll plans
  • QuickBooks Payroll — tax filing included in Core and Premium/Elite plans
  • ADP RUN — tax filing included, but pricing is quote-based
  • Patriot Payroll — tax filing included in Full Service plan
  • OnPay — tax filing included in the flat monthly price
  • Rippling Payroll — tax filing included, but usually sold as part of a broader HR platform
  • Square Payroll — tax filing included for contractor and employee payroll

Best simple picks:

  • Gusto if you want easy setup and clean UI
  • OnPay if you want flat pricing and strong value
  • Patriot Payroll if you want one of the cheapest full-service options

If you want, I can also give you a side-by-side pricing chart for the cheapest platforms.

retrieval Mentioned

Here are some payroll platforms where tax filing is included in the advertised price or standard plan:

  • Gusto — all plans include filing and paying federal, state, and local payroll taxes. (gusto.com)
  • OnPay — pricing includes tax filings and payments in all 50 states. (help.onpay.com)
  • Square Payroll — includes federal and state tax filings and payments at no additional charge. (squareup.com)
  • Patriot Full Service Payroll — includes federal, state, and local tax filings/deposits, plus year-end filings at no additional fee. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • RUN Powered by ADP — ADP says tax filing is included in the plan comparison for RUN, and it will calculate, file, deposit, and reconcile payroll taxes. (adp.com)
  • QuickBooks Online Payroll Premium / Elite — automated tax payments and filings are included; local tax filing is available in Premium and Elite only. (quickbooks.intuit.com)
  • Paychex — tax services are automatically included in most payroll/HR packages. (paychex.com)

If you want, I can narrow this down to the cheapest options, best for multi-state payroll, or best for small businesses under 10 employees.

What payroll platforms are affordable for startups? transactional
2/2 mentions 2 responses
recall Mentioned

Here are some affordable payroll platforms startups often use:

  • Gusto — popular all-in-one option for small teams; easy setup, payroll, benefits, and basic HR.
  • Wave Payroll — low-cost if you already use Wave accounting; good for very small teams.
  • OnPay — strong value for startups that want payroll + HR without paying enterprise pricing.
  • Patriot Payroll — one of the cheapest options; solid for basic payroll needs.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks; convenient, but pricing can climb.
  • Homebase Payroll — great for hourly teams and small businesses with scheduling needs.
  • Rippling — more powerful, but usually pricier; worth it if you need payroll plus IT/HR automation.

If you want the cheapest picks: Patriot Payroll and Wave Payroll. If you want the best balance of price and ease: Gusto or OnPay.

If you tell me your country, team size, and whether you need contractors or W-2 employees, I can narrow it down.

retrieval Mentioned

Yes — for startups, the most affordable options right now are usually:

  • Patriot Software: $37/mo + $5 per worker paid for Full Service, or $18.50/mo + $2.50 per worker paid for Basic. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Roll by ADP: $39/mo + $5 per employee. (rollbyadp.com)
  • Square Payroll: $35/mo + $6 per employee for W-2 employees and contractors; contractor-only is $6 per contractor paid. (squareup.com)
  • OnPay: $49/mo + $6 per person. (help.onpay.com)
  • Gusto: $49/mo + $6 per person on the Simple plan. (gusto.com)
  • QuickBooks Payroll: pricing starts with Core/Premium/Elite tiers, and QuickBooks says each employee adds $6.50, $10, or $12/month depending on plan. (quickbooks.intuit.com)

Best budget picks:

  • Cheapest for very small teams: Patriot or Roll. (patriotsoftware.com)
  • Best if you want the simplest startup-friendly setup: Gusto or OnPay. (gusto.com)
  • Best if you already use Square: Square Payroll. (squareup.com)

If you want, I can narrow this to 1–2 best options based on your team size, contractor mix, and whether you need benefits/HR.

TOM — Top of Mind (15 prompts)

What are the best payroll platforms for small businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  • Gusto — Best overall for most small businesses. Easy setup, great UI, strong benefits/HR add-ons, and solid customer support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks. Nice integration with accounting, automatic tax filing, and simple payroll runs.
  • Rippling — Best for growing businesses. Combines payroll, HR, IT, and device management in one platform.
  • ADP RUN — Best for reliability and compliance. Strong payroll features, tax support, and scalable as you grow.
  • OnPay — Best value. Straightforward pricing, good for multi-state payroll, and includes HR basics.
  • Patriot Payroll — Best budget option. Affordable, simple, and good for very small teams.
  • Paychex Flex — Best for businesses wanting more hands-on support and advanced HR options.

Quick picks:

  • Small team, easy-to-use: Gusto
  • Already using QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Fast-growing company: Rippling
  • Budget-conscious: Patriot Payroll or OnPay

If you want, I can also narrow this down by price, number of employees, or whether you need contractor-only payroll.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for most small businesses. Easy to use, strong benefits/admin tools, and great employee self-service.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks. Solid payroll + accounting integration, easy tax filing, and familiar interface.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for growing small businesses that want a more established provider. Very reliable, with strong support and compliance features.

  1. Rippling

Best for companies that want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system. Powerful, but more feature-heavy.

  1. OnPay

Best value for small businesses. Simple pricing, good for restaurants, nonprofits, and businesses with hourly workers.

  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that want flexible service options and more hands-on support.

  1. Square Payroll

Best for retail, restaurants, and service businesses already using Square POS. Very straightforward setup.

Quick pick by business type
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for all-in-one HR: Rippling
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay
  • Best for POS users: Square Payroll

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for 1–10 employees.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  1. Gusto — Best overall
    • Easy setup, great UI, solid payroll + HR + benefits
    • Good for most small teams
  2. QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Strong accounting integration
    • Simple for bookkeepers and small businesses
  3. Rippling — Best for growing teams
    • Payroll + HR + IT in one system
    • Better if you want automation and scalability
  4. OnPay — Best value
    • Affordable, straightforward, and very small-business friendly
    • Good support and no complicated add-ons
  5. ADP RUN — Best for full-service payroll
    • Very established, handles taxes and compliance well
    • Good if you want a big-name provider
  6. Paychex Flex — Best for payroll + HR support
    • Good for businesses that want hands-on service
    • Strong compliance tools

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best cheap/easy: OnPay
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for scaling: Rippling

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform based on number of employees, budget, or industry.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for small businesses:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for most small businesses.

  • Easy to use
  • Strong payroll, benefits, and HR tools
  • Great for W-2 employees and contractors
  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.

  • Seamless bookkeeping integration
  • Solid tax filing support
  • Good for simple payroll needs
  1. ADP Run

Best for businesses that want a more established, full-service option.

  • Very reliable
  • Good compliance support
  • Scales well as you grow
  1. OnPay

Best value for small businesses.

  • Flat pricing
  • Easy payroll + HR features
  • Good for teams with mixed employee types
  1. Paychex Flex

Best for businesses that may need more HR services later.

  • Flexible plans
  • Strong support
  • Good for growing businesses
  1. Rippling

Best for companies that want payroll plus broader workforce management.

  • Payroll, HR, IT, and device management in one system
  • Very modern platform
  • Better for tech-forward companies

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for your business type.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For most small businesses, the best payroll platforms are:

  1. Gusto — best overall
    • Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR tools
    • Great for startups and growing teams
  2. QuickBooks Payroll — best for QuickBooks users
    • Seamless if you already use QuickBooks Online
    • Good tax filing and accounting integration
  3. OnPay — best value
    • Simple pricing, solid payroll + basic HR
    • Good for small teams that don’t need a lot of extras
  4. Rippling — best for all-in-one HR/IT/payroll
    • Powerful if you want payroll, onboarding, device management, and HR in one system
    • Better for more tech-savvy businesses
  5. ADP Run — best for larger small businesses
    • Reliable, scalable, and widely trusted
    • Good if you expect to grow fast
  6. Paychex Flex — best for hands-on support
    • Strong customer support and payroll services
    • Good for businesses that want help managing compliance

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best cheap/simple option: OnPay
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best all-in-one: Rippling

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for 1099 contractors.

What are the top payroll platforms for startups?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for startups:

  1. Gusto — Best overall for most startups
    • Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR in one place
    • Great UX and solid support
  2. Rippling — Best for scaling startups
    • Combines payroll, HR, IT, and device management
    • Very powerful if you expect fast growth
  3. Deel — Best for global teams and contractors
    • Strong for international payroll, EOR, and contractor payments
    • Good if you hire outside the U.S.
  4. ADP Run — Best for established payroll infrastructure
    • Reliable and widely trusted
    • Good compliance coverage, but less startup-friendly than Gusto
  5. QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Simple add-on for accounting + payroll in one ecosystem
    • Good for very small teams
  6. OnPay — Best value
    • Lower-cost, straightforward payroll and HR features
    • Good for small startups that want simplicity
  7. Paychex Flex — Best for hands-on service
    • Strong support and compliance help
    • Useful if you want more guidance

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for fast-growing startups: Rippling
  • Best for global hiring: Deel
  • Best budget option: OnPay

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 by startup stage (pre-seed, seed, Series A+) or compare pricing.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For startups, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto – Best overall for small startups
    • Easy setup, clean UI, strong payroll + benefits + contractor handling
    • Great for U.S.-based teams
  2. Rippling – Best for all-in-one HR/IT/payroll
    • Payroll, HR, device management, app access in one platform
    • Strong if you expect fast headcount growth
  3. Deel – Best for global contractors and international hiring
    • Excellent for paying contractors and employees in many countries
    • Good if you’re hiring remote talent worldwide
  4. QuickBooks Payroll – Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Simple payroll with tight accounting integration
    • Solid for very small teams
  5. ADP RUN – Best for traditional payroll reliability
    • Strong compliance support and tax filing
    • Good if you want a well-known provider
  6. BambooHR Payroll – Best if you want HR + payroll together
    • Better for startups that care about HR workflows as much as payroll

Quick pick:

  • U.S. startup: Gusto
  • Fast-growing startup: Rippling
  • Global team: Deel

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform by startup stage, team size, or budget.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top likely picks for startup payroll:

  • Gusto — best all-around for early-stage startups
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one platform
  • Deel — best for global contractors and international hiring
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
  • OnPay — best budget-friendly option
  • ADP RUN — solid, but usually better once you’re bigger

If you want one covering most startups: Gusto is usually the easiest default. If you’re hiring globally: Deel. If you want a more “all-in-one” ops stack: Rippling.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for startups:

  1. Gusto — Best all-around for small startups
    • Easy setup, great UX, solid payroll + benefits + HR
    • Good for U.S.-based teams
  2. Rippling — Best for fast-growing startups
    • Payroll, HR, IT, and device management in one system
    • Great if you expect hiring and ops complexity quickly
  3. Deel — Best for global startups / contractors
    • Strong for international employees and contractors
    • Handles cross-border payroll and compliance well
  4. Justworks — Best for simple payroll + benefits
    • Very startup-friendly, especially if you want payroll plus PEO-style support
    • Good compliance help for small teams
  5. OnPay — Best budget-friendly option
    • Straightforward payroll, HR, and benefits at a lower price point
    • Good for lean startups
  6. ADP RUN — Best for established payroll provider
    • Reliable and scalable, with strong compliance tools
    • Less “startup-y” than Gusto/Rippling, but very capable
  7. QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Convenient for companies using Intuit accounting products
    • Easy integration with bookkeeping

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling: Rippling
  • Best for global hiring: Deel
  • Best budget option: OnPay

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform by startup stage (pre-seed, seed, Series A) or by team size.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for startups:

  1. Gusto

Best all-around for early-stage startups. Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR in one place.

  1. Rippling

Best if you want payroll plus IT/device/app management and a scalable HR platform.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks Online. Simple, solid for small teams.

  1. Deel

Best for startups hiring contractors or employees internationally. Great global compliance tools.

  1. Remote

Another strong choice for global payroll and EOR needs, especially remote-first startups.

  1. ADP Run

Good for startups that want a more established payroll provider with room to grow.

  1. Paychex Flex

Solid payroll and HR option, often used by small businesses that want full-service support.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling: Rippling
  • Best for global teams: Deel
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or international hiring.

What payroll platform options are most recommended?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms people most often recommend:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small businesses; easy UI, strong payroll + benefits.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; great automation.
  • ADP RUN — strong for growing businesses; very established, lots of support options.
  • Paychex Flex — good for small to mid-size companies that want more service help.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — solid, simple, and often a good value for SMBs.
  • Deel — best for international contractors and global payroll.
  • Remote — another strong choice for global hiring/payroll.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling/automation: Rippling
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for global teams: Deel

If you tell me your business size, country, and whether you have hourly employees, contractors, or international staff, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms most often recommended:

  • Gusto — best overall for small businesses; easy setup, solid benefits + HR add-ons
  • ADP Run — strong for growing businesses that want a trusted, full-service payroll provider
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll tied closely to HR, IT, and device management
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting
  • Paychex Flex — good all-around option with strong support and HR tools
  • OnPay — great value for small businesses; simple and well-liked
  • Zenefits / TriNet Zenefits — useful for HR-heavy teams, though payroll is usually not the main reason to choose it
  • Square Payroll — good for hourly teams and businesses already using Square

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scale: ADP Run or Rippling
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best value: OnPay

If you tell me your company size and whether you need contractor payments, benefits, or multi-state payroll, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The most commonly recommended payroll platforms are:

  • Gusto — best for small businesses; very easy to use, strong HR/features, good pricing.
  • Rippling — best all-in-one option if you want payroll + HR + IT + device management.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — best for larger or more complex businesses; very robust, but pricier.
  • Paychex Flex — solid mid-market choice with strong support and compliance help.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks Online and want simple accounting sync.
  • Deel — best for international hiring, contractors, and global payroll.
  • Remote — another strong choice for global payroll and employer-of-record services.

If you want a quick pick:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Fast-growing company: Rippling
  • Enterprise/compliance-heavy: ADP
  • International teams: Deel or Remote

If you tell me your business size, country, and whether you have employees or contractors, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms people usually recommend:

  • Gusto — best for small businesses; easy setup, solid HR/payroll, good support
  • ADP — best for scale and compliance; very widely used, strong for larger or growing companies
  • Rippling — best all-in-one HR + IT + payroll; great if you want payroll tied to onboarding, devices, apps
  • Paychex Flex — strong for small to mid-size businesses; good payroll + HR services
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting
  • OnPay — great value for small businesses; simple, affordable, reliable
  • Patriot Payroll — budget-friendly option for very small businesses
  • Square Payroll — good for hourly/retail/restaurant teams, especially if you use Square POS

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Small business: Gusto or OnPay
  • Growing business: Rippling or ADP
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you need contractor payroll or benefits, I can narrow it to the best 2–3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms people most often recommend:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small businesses; easy setup, strong benefits, solid support.
  • ADP Run — very common, scalable, good for growing businesses and compliance.
  • Paychex Flex — strong HR/payroll combo, good for businesses that want more support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • Rippling — great for payroll + HR + IT in one system, especially for modern startups.
  • OnPay — simple, affordable, and well-liked for small teams.
  • Square Payroll — good for hourly/retail/service businesses, especially if you use Square.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling: ADP Run or Rippling
  • Best budget-friendly: OnPay
  • Best with QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you tell me your business size, state/country, and whether you need HR/time tracking, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

What are the most popular payroll platforms for companies?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular payroll platforms for companies are:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — very common for SMBs to enterprises
  • Paychex Flex — popular with small and mid-sized businesses
  • Gusto — especially popular with startups and small businesses
  • QuickBooks Payroll — strong choice if you already use QuickBooks
  • Rippling — payroll plus HR/IT in one platform
  • Workday Payroll — larger companies and enterprise use
  • SAP SuccessFactors Employee Central Payroll — enterprise/global organizations
  • Oracle Payroll — big companies with complex payroll needs
  • Zenefits Payroll — SMB-focused, often used with HR tools
  • OnPay — simple, affordable option for small businesses

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best payroll platforms by company size, or
  2. a comparison table of pricing/features.
Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular payroll platforms for companies are:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — very widely used, strong for SMBs to enterprise
  • Paychex Flex — popular with small and mid-sized businesses
  • Gusto — especially popular with startups and small businesses
  • Intuit QuickBooks Payroll — common for businesses already using QuickBooks
  • Rippling — payroll plus HR/IT, popular with modern SMBs and mid-market companies
  • Paycom — strong all-in-one HR/payroll for mid-market and larger companies
  • UKG Pro — used by larger companies needing deeper workforce management
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-focused, often part of Workday HCM
  • SAP SuccessFactors Payroll — common in large/global enterprises
  • BambooHR Payroll — best known for SMB HR, with payroll in supported regions

If you want, I can also rank these by best for small business, mid-market, or enterprise.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular payroll platforms for companies are:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — one of the biggest and most established payroll providers
  • Gusto — very popular with small businesses and startups
  • Paychex Flex — common for small to mid-sized businesses
  • QuickBooks Payroll — popular if you already use QuickBooks accounting
  • Rippling — payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one platform
  • Workday Payroll — used more by larger enterprises
  • Paycom — strong all-in-one HR and payroll platform
  • Square Payroll — popular for retail, restaurants, and hourly teams
  • OnPay — simple payroll for small businesses
  • Zenefits / TriNet — payroll bundled with HR and benefits

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best payroll platforms by company size, or
  2. a comparison table with pricing and features.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Some of the most popular payroll platforms companies use are:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — very widely used; strong for small to enterprise businesses
  • Paychex Flex — popular with SMBs; payroll plus HR tools
  • Gusto — especially popular with small businesses and startups
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting
  • Rippling — payroll + HR + IT management, popular with fast-growing companies
  • Square Payroll — common for small businesses, especially retail and restaurants
  • Paycom — strong all-in-one HR/payroll platform for mid-market companies
  • UKG Pro / UKG Ready — popular for larger companies and workforce management
  • Ceridian Dayforce — enterprise-grade payroll and HCM
  • OnPay — simpler payroll platform for small businesses

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  • best for small businesses
  • best for mid-size companies
  • best for enterprise
  • lowest cost
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

The most popular payroll platforms for companies include:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run – very widely used, strong for mid-size to enterprise
  • Paychex Flex – popular with SMBs and growing companies
  • Gusto – especially popular with startups and small businesses
  • QuickBooks Payroll – common for businesses already using QuickBooks
  • Rippling – popular for companies wanting payroll + HR + IT in one system
  • BambooHR Payroll – good for smaller teams already on BambooHR
  • Paycom – strong all-in-one HR/payroll for mid-market companies
  • UKG Pro / UKG Ready – common in larger organizations
  • Workday Payroll – enterprise-grade, often used by large companies
  • OnPay – well-liked by small businesses for simplicity and price

If you want, I can also rank these by best for small business, mid-size, or enterprise.

What payroll platforms are best for growing businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For growing businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that scale payroll + HR + benefits without becoming a headache.

Top picks
  • Gusto — best overall for small-to-mid growing businesses

Easy setup, clean UI, strong payroll + benefits + basic HR.

  • Rippling — best for fast-growing teams with lots of apps/devices

Strong automation, payroll, HR, IT/device management, and integrations.

  • ADP RUN — best for businesses that want a proven, full-service option

Solid compliance support and room to grow into ADP’s larger offerings.

  • Paychex Flex — best for growing companies that want hands-on service

Good payroll + HR with strong support and add-ons.

  • TriNet — best if you want payroll bundled with HR outsourcing

Useful for businesses that want more of a co-employment/PEO-style setup.

If you’re choosing by stage
  • 10–50 employees: Gusto, Paychex Flex
  • 50–200 employees: Rippling, ADP RUN
  • 200+ employees: ADP, Paychex, or a PEO like TriNet
My quick recommendation
  • Best all-around: Gusto
  • Best for scaling operations: Rippling
  • Best enterprise-style support: ADP RUN

If you want, I can narrow this down by industry, employee count, and budget.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For growing businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that scale cleanly with HR, benefits, time tracking, and multi-state compliance.

Top picks:

  • Gusto — Best all-around for small to mid-sized businesses. Easy payroll, solid benefits, strong UX.
  • Rippling — Best for fast-growing companies that want payroll + HR + IT in one system.
  • ADP Run — Good for businesses that want a trusted, scalable payroll provider with lots of support.
  • Paychex Flex — Strong for SMBs needing payroll plus HR and compliance tools.
  • OnPay — Great value for growing teams that want simple payroll and good customer support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • Deel — Best for global hiring and contractor/payroll needs across countries.

Quick guidance:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scale/automation: Rippling
  • Best for traditional payroll support: ADP Run
  • Best budget-friendly choice: OnPay
  • Best for global teams: Deel

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platforms by business size, budget, or industry.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For growing businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small to mid-sized businesses; easy setup, strong HR/tools, great user experience.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; very scalable.
  • ADP RUN — solid choice for businesses that want a trusted, established provider and may grow into more complex payroll needs.
  • Paychex Flex — good for businesses that want flexible payroll/HR with more hands-on support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — good value for growing teams that want straightforward payroll without too much complexity.
Quick picks by need
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling quickly: Rippling
  • Best enterprise path: ADP
  • Best support-heavy option: Paychex
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
What to look for
  • Automatic tax filing
  • Direct deposit
  • Multi-state payroll
  • Benefits and HR integration
  • Time tracking
  • Contractor payments
  • Strong customer support

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your business size, industry, and budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For growing businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto

Best for: small to mid-sized businesses that want easy setup and a clean UI. Why: solid payroll, benefits, onboarding, and HR tools in one place.

  1. Rippling

Best for: fast-growing companies that want payroll + HR + IT in one system. Why: very flexible, great automation, strong for multi-state teams.

  1. ADP Workforce Now

Best for: larger or more complex businesses. Why: robust compliance, payroll, HR, and reporting; very scalable.

  1. Paychex Flex

Best for: businesses that want strong service and compliance support. Why: good payroll, HR, and tax handling, with scalable plans.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best for: businesses already using QuickBooks. Why: simple integration with accounting, easy for smaller teams.

  1. OnPay

Best for: SMBs that want value and simplicity. Why: straightforward pricing and strong payroll/benefits features.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall for growth: Rippling
  • Best easy-to-use option: Gusto
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for enterprise scaling: ADP Workforce Now

If you want, I can narrow this down by team size, budget, and whether you need HR/benefits too.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For growing businesses, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small to midsize teams; easy setup, strong benefits, good HR tools.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; great for fast-growing companies.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — best for scalability and compliance; stronger for more complex needs.
  • Paychex Flex — good for businesses that want payroll with HR support and scalable service.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — strong value pick; simple, reliable, and good for smaller growing teams.
  • Deel — best for international hiring and contractor-heavy teams.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for fast growth: Rippling
  • Best for complex payroll/compliance: ADP
  • Best value: OnPay
  • Best for global teams: Deel

If you want, I can also give you a shortlist based on your team size, budget, and whether you hire hourly, salaried, or international workers.

What are the leading payroll platforms right now?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

The leading payroll platforms right now are usually:

  • Gusto — best known for small to mid-sized businesses in the U.S.
  • ADP RUN / ADP Workforce Now — very common for SMBs to enterprise
  • Paychex Flex — strong SMB payroll + HR suite
  • QuickBooks Payroll — good if you already use QuickBooks
  • Rippling Payroll — popular for modern HR + IT + payroll in one system
  • Deel — strong for global hiring, contractors, and international payroll
  • Remote — also strong for global payroll/EOR
  • Ceridian Dayforce — enterprise-grade, especially for larger organizations
  • UKG Pro — widely used in mid-market and enterprise
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-focused, especially for companies already on Workday

If you want the best by use case:

  • Small business: Gusto, QuickBooks Payroll
  • Growing SMB/mid-market: Rippling, Paychex Flex, ADP RUN
  • Enterprise: ADP Workforce Now, Dayforce, UKG Pro, Workday
  • Global payroll: Deel, Remote

If you want, I can also rank them for price, ease of use, or best for your company size/country.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

The leading payroll platforms right now include:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — very widely used, especially for mid-market and enterprise
  • Gusto — strong for small businesses; easy payroll + HR
  • Paychex Flex — popular with SMBs; good compliance support
  • Rippling — payroll plus HR/IT in one platform; fast-growing
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
  • OnPay — simple, affordable SMB payroll
  • UKG Ready / UKG Pro — strong for larger orgs and complex workforce needs
  • SAP SuccessFactors Employee Central Payroll — enterprise/global payroll
  • Oracle Payroll (Oracle Fusion HCM) — enterprise-grade
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise, especially for companies already on Workday

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. the best payroll platforms for small businesses,
  2. the best enterprise payroll systems, or
  3. a side-by-side comparison by price and features.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

The leading payroll platforms right now include:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — huge market leader, strong for compliance and scaling.
  • Gusto — very popular with small businesses; easy UI and solid benefits support.
  • Paychex Flex — strong all-in-one payroll + HR for SMBs.
  • Rippling — modern platform for payroll, HR, IT, and device management.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • Workday HCM Payroll — enterprise-grade, best for large companies.
  • UKG Pro — strong for workforce management and payroll in mid-market/enterprise.
  • Paycom — good for unified HR/payroll with employee self-service.
  • OnPay — affordable, simple payroll for small businesses.
  • Square Payroll — solid for restaurants, retail, and hourly teams.

If you want, I can narrow this to:

  1. best for small business,
  2. best for enterprise, or
  3. best overall.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the leading payroll platforms right now, by common use case:

  • Gusto — best-known for small businesses; easy payroll, benefits, and HR
  • ADP — the biggest all-around payroll provider; strong for SMB to enterprise
  • Paychex — popular with SMBs; solid payroll, tax filing, and HR services
  • Rippling — modern all-in-one platform; payroll + IT + HR in one system
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-grade payroll for large companies
  • UKG — strong for workforce management plus payroll, especially mid-market/enterprise
  • Intuit QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
  • Square Payroll — good for restaurants, retail, and hourly teams
  • OnPay — simple, affordable payroll for small businesses
  • Deel — leading for global payroll and contractor payments

If you want, I can also rank them by:

  1. small business,
  2. mid-market,
  3. enterprise, or
  4. global payroll.
Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

The leading payroll platforms right now include:

  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run — biggest all-around player; strong for small businesses through enterprise.
  • Gusto — one of the best for SMBs; very easy payroll, benefits, and onboarding.
  • Paychex Flex — popular with small and midsize businesses; solid HR/payroll combo.
  • Rippling — standout for payroll + HR + IT in one system; great for modern fast-growing companies.
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-grade, best for large organizations already using Workday.
  • Oracle Payroll (Oracle Fusion Cloud HCM) — strong enterprise option, especially for global companies.
  • Ceridian Dayforce — known for real-time payroll and workforce management.
  • UKG Pro — strong for larger employers with complex workforce needs.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — a simpler, cost-effective SMB payroll platform.

If you want, I can also rank these by:

  • best overall
  • best for small business
  • best for enterprise
  • best for global payroll
Which payroll platforms are best for remote teams?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Best payroll platforms for remote teams:

  1. Deel

Best overall for global remote teams. Great for hiring contractors and employees in many countries, handling local compliance, and paying in multiple currencies.

  1. Remote

Strong for international payroll and employer-of-record services. Good if you want a simpler global hiring/compliance setup.

  1. Papaya Global

Best for large, distributed teams that need multi-country payroll, analytics, and centralized workforce management.

  1. Rippling

Best for U.S.-based remote teams that also want payroll + HR + IT in one system. Strong automation and employee management.

  1. Gusto

Best for small U.S. remote teams. Easy to use, affordable, and good for payroll, benefits, and onboarding.

  1. ADP Workforce Now

Best for larger companies needing mature payroll features and scalability, especially if you have mixed in-house and remote staff.

If you want the shortest recommendation:

  • Global remote team: Deel or Remote
  • U.S. remote team: Gusto or Rippling
  • Enterprise / complex payroll: Papaya Global or ADP

If you want, I can also give you a best-by-use-case comparison table.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For remote teams, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle multi-country payroll, contractors, tax/compliance, and local payments well.

Best overall
  • Deel — Best for global remote teams with employees + contractors in many countries.
  • Papaya Global — Strong for international payroll and EOR coverage.
  • Remote — Great for hiring and paying remote employees globally, with a clean UX.
Best for U.S.-based teams
  • Gusto — Best for small to mid-sized teams in the U.S.; simple and reliable.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll plus HR/IT/device management in one system.
  • ADP — Best for larger companies needing deeper payroll features and compliance.
Best for contractors/freelancers
  • Deel Contractor — Excellent for paying international contractors.
  • Rippling Contractor — Good if you already use Rippling.
  • Wise Business — Good for straightforward international payments, but not a full payroll system.
Best for enterprise/global complexity
  • Workday Payroll — Best for large enterprises with complex HR/payroll needs.
  • SAP SuccessFactors + SAP Payroll — Strong for global enterprise environments.
Quick pick
  • Global remote team: Deel
  • Hybrid U.S. + contractors: Rippling or Gusto
  • International payroll at scale: Papaya Global
  • Simple global hiring/payments: Remote

If you want, I can also give you a best payroll platform by company size or by countries you hire in.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Best payroll platforms for remote teams:

  • Deel — best overall for global remote hiring, contractor + employee payroll, compliance, and localized contracts.
  • Remote — strong for international EOR payroll, benefits, and compliance; very clean UX.
  • Rippling — best if you want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system.
  • Papaya Global — good for multinational payroll automation and paying workers in many countries.
  • Gusto — best for U.S.-based remote teams; simple payroll, benefits, and contractor payments.
  • ADP Workforce Now / ADP Global Payroll — best for larger enterprises that need deep payroll coverage and support.
  • BambooHR + payroll add-on — good lightweight HR-first option for smaller distributed teams.

Quick picks:

  • Global contractors + employees: Deel
  • Mostly U.S. remote team: Gusto
  • All-in-one HR + payroll + IT: Rippling
  • Enterprise/global scale: ADP or Papaya Global

If you tell me your team size and which countries you hire in, I can narrow it to the best 2–3 options.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For remote teams, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle multi-country payroll, contractors, compliance, and tax forms well.

Best overall
  • Deel — best for global remote teams with employees and contractors in many countries.
  • Remote — strong for international hiring/payroll compliance and employer-of-record support.
  • Rippling — great if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system, especially for distributed teams.
  • Gusto — best for small U.S.-based remote teams; very easy to use.
  • ADP — solid for larger companies needing robust payroll and tax support.
Best by use case
  • Best for global contractors: Deel
  • Best for international employees: Remote
  • Best all-in-one HR/payroll: Rippling
  • Best for startups in the U.S.: Gusto
  • Best for enterprise: ADP
Quick recommendation
  • If your team is spread across multiple countries: Deel or Remote
  • If your team is mostly U.S.-based: Gusto
  • If you want payroll plus device/app management: Rippling

If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, countries, and whether you pay employees or contractors.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For remote teams, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that handle multi-country compliance, contractor payments, and local tax rules well.

Best overall
  • Deel — Great for global remote teams with employees + contractors in many countries. Strong compliance and EOR support.
  • Remote — Excellent for international hiring, payroll, and compliance. Very clean UX and strong direct employment support.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll plus IT, HR, and device management in one system. Strong for distributed teams.
Best for US-based remote teams
  • Gusto — Easy to use, great for startups and small teams, strong US payroll and benefits.
  • ADP Run — More robust for larger US teams that want a mature payroll provider.
Best for contractor-heavy teams
  • Deel — One of the best for paying global contractors.
  • Papaya Global — Strong for complex international contractor and payroll needs.
  • Oyster — Good for distributed teams hiring globally with a simpler setup.
Best if you want HR + payroll together
  • Rippling
  • Deel
  • Remote
Quick picks
  • Best overall: Deel
  • Best UX: Remote
  • Best all-in-one system: Rippling
  • Best US SMB: Gusto

If you want, I can narrow this down by team size, countries, and whether you pay employees, contractors, or both.

What are the best payroll platforms for employers?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for employers, by use case:

  • Best overall for small to midsize businesses: Gusto

Easy setup, strong payroll + HR benefits, great user experience.

  • Best for growing companies: Rippling

Combines payroll, HR, IT, and device management; very strong automation.

  • Best for large businesses / enterprise: ADP Workforce Now or ADP Run

Deep compliance tools, scalable, widely trusted.

  • Best for mid-market businesses: Paychex Flex

Solid payroll, tax filing, HR support, and good service options.

  • Best for simple payroll + accounting: QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks Online.

  • Best for hourly teams and retail/restaurant: Square Payroll

Simple, affordable, good for shift-based businesses.

  • Best for global payroll / contractors: Deel

Great for international hiring, contractor payments, and employer-of-record services.

  • Best for global enterprise payroll: Papaya Global

Strong cross-border payroll and workforce payments.

Quick picks
  • Small business: Gusto
  • Fast-growing startup: Rippling
  • Enterprise: ADP
  • Accounting-first: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Global hiring: Deel

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platforms by budget, company size, or industry.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for employers, depending on company size and needs:

  • Gusto — Best for small businesses; easy setup, strong benefits and HR tools.
  • ADP Run — Best all-around for small to mid-sized businesses; very reliable with solid tax filing and support.
  • Paychex Flex — Great for growing companies; good HR, payroll, and compliance features.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting; simple and integrated.
  • Rippling — Best for companies wanting payroll + HR + IT in one system; very modern and automated.
  • Workday Payroll — Best for large enterprises; powerful but more complex.
  • OnPay — Strong value for small businesses; straightforward pricing and good service.
  • Zenefits Payroll — Good for SMBs already using Zenefits for HR benefits.

Best picks by use case:

  • Easiest for small businesses: Gusto
  • Most established: ADP Run
  • Best value: OnPay
  • Best for automation: Rippling
  • Best for enterprise: Workday Payroll

If you want, I can also narrow this down by company size, budget, or country.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for employers, by use case:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses. Easy payroll, benefits, hiring, and strong UX.
  • ADP RUN — Best for growing businesses that want a very established payroll provider.
  • Paychex Flex — Good all-around payroll + HR, especially for companies that want support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • Rippling — Best for companies that want payroll tightly integrated with HR, IT, and device management.
  • OnPay — Great value for small businesses; simple and affordable.
  • Square Payroll — Best for hourly teams and businesses already using Square POS.
  • Paylocity — Strong for mid-sized companies needing more HR features.
  • UKG Ready — Good for larger employers with complex workforce needs.
  • Workday Payroll — Best for enterprise organizations.
Quick picks
  • Small business: Gusto, OnPay
  • Accounting-first: QuickBooks Payroll
  • HR/IT automation: Rippling
  • Enterprise: Workday, UKG, ADP

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you need HR/benefits/time tracking, I can narrow it to the best 3.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for employers, depending on your business size and needs:

Best overall
  • Gusto — Great for small to mid-sized businesses. Easy setup, strong HR tools, benefits, contractor payments, and excellent user experience.
Best for growing teams
  • Rippling — Strong choice if you want payroll plus HR, IT, and device management in one system. Very powerful automation.
Best for larger companies
  • ADP Workforce Now — A long-time leader with deep payroll/compliance features, good for scaling businesses and more complex needs.
Best for enterprise
  • Workday Payroll — Best for large organizations already using Workday HR/finance tools.
Best for mid-market
  • Paylocity — Good mix of payroll, HR, and employee engagement tools, with solid reporting.
Best for simple, affordable payroll
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Ideal if you already use QuickBooks accounting. Easy for small businesses.
Best for contractor/global payroll
  • Deel — Excellent for international hiring, contractor payments, and global compliance.
Best for service-heavy businesses
  • BambooHR + Payroll — Strong HR-first platform with payroll add-ons, good for companies that prioritize employee management.
Quick picks by use case
  • Best easy-to-use: Gusto
  • Best automation: Rippling
  • Best compliance depth: ADP
  • Best global payroll: Deel
  • Best accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you pay employees, contractors, or both, I can narrow it to the best 3 options.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for employers, depending on your company size and needs:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small to mid-sized businesses. Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR tools, very user-friendly.
  • ADP Workforce Now — Best for larger businesses. Very robust payroll, tax, and compliance features; scalable but more complex.
  • Paychex Flex — Great for small and mid-sized companies that want payroll plus HR support. Solid service and compliance help.
  • Rippling — Best for companies wanting payroll + IT + HR in one system. Very modern, automates lots of admin work.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting. Tight integration and simple payroll processing.
  • OnPay — Good budget-friendly option for small businesses. Straightforward pricing and strong payroll basics.
  • BambooHR Payroll — Best for HR-focused teams using BambooHR already. Nice employee management experience.

Quick picks:

  • Best for most small businesses: Gusto
  • Best for scaling companies: Rippling
  • Best for enterprise: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best value: OnPay

If you want, I can also give you a top 3 by company size or a comparison table with pricing/features.

What payroll platform should I use for my business?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

It depends mostly on your team size, location, and whether you need HR/tax help. Quick picks:

  • Best overall for small businesses: Gusto

Easy setup, solid payroll, benefits, and contractor support.

  • Best for scaling SMBs: Rippling

Great if you want payroll + HR + device/app management in one system.

  • Best for accountants / multi-client firms: QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks for bookkeeping.

  • Best for large or global teams: ADP Workforce Now or Deel

ADP for U.S. enterprise-grade payroll; Deel for international contractors/employees.

  • Best budget option: OnPay

Strong value for straightforward payroll and HR basics.

If you want the simplest recommendation: Gusto for most small businesses, Rippling if you expect to grow fast.

If you tell me: 1) country, 2) employee count, 3) W-2 employees vs contractors, 4) whether you need benefits/HR,

I can recommend the best exact platform.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

It depends on your business size and needs, but here’s the quick rule:

  • Best overall for most small businesses: Gusto
  • Best for contractors/freelancers: Justworks
  • Best for growing companies with HR needs: Rippling
  • Best if you want the cheapest simple payroll: Square Payroll
  • Best for larger/more complex businesses: ADP Run or Paychex Flex
My default recommendation

If you’re a typical small business with employees in one country, use Gusto. It’s easy to set up, handles payroll, taxes, direct deposit, W-2s/1099s, and has decent HR tools.

Pick based on your situation
  • 1–20 employees, simple payroll: Gusto
  • Need benefits + HR + payroll in one place: Rippling
  • Mostly contractors or very small team: Square Payroll
  • Want a PEO / outsourced HR: Justworks
  • Need enterprise-style support and compliance: ADP Run

If you tell me: 1) how many employees you have, 2) what country/state you’re in, and 3) whether you pay contractors too, I can give you a single best pick.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

It depends mostly on how many employees you have and whether you need HR, benefits, and contractor/payroll support.

Best overall for most small businesses

Gusto

  • Best mix of payroll, benefits, and ease of use
  • Great for 1–100 employees
  • Strong for W-2 employees and contractors
Best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one

Rippling

  • Best if you want one system for payroll, HR, devices, and app access
  • Strong for growing companies and multi-state teams
Best for accounting-heavy businesses

QuickBooks Payroll

  • Best if you already use QuickBooks Online
  • Simple setup, good bookkeeping sync
Best for very small businesses on a budget

OnPay

  • Usually cheaper than Gusto/Rippling
  • Good for small teams and basic payroll needs
Best for larger, more complex businesses

ADP Run or ADP Workforce Now

  • More enterprise-grade
  • Better if you need advanced compliance, tax handling, or lots of employees
Best for contractors or international hiring

Deel

  • Great for global contractors and international employees
  • Less ideal if you only need standard US payroll
My quick recommendation
  • 1–20 employees: Gusto
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Fast-growing / need HR + IT: Rippling
  • Cheapest solid option: OnPay
  • Large or complex payroll: ADP

If you tell me: 1) how many employees you have, 2) whether you pay contractors, and 3) whether you need benefits/HR,

I can give you a single best pick.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

It depends mostly on country, headcount, and whether you need HR/accounting features. If you want a solid default:

Best overall for most small businesses

Gusto

  • Easy setup
  • Great payroll + benefits + basic HR
  • Strong for US businesses with 1–100 employees
Best for growing businesses / more complex payroll

Rippling

  • Excellent if you want payroll + HR + IT/device management in one system
  • Strong automations
  • Best when you expect to scale
Best for accountants / multi-client management

QuickBooks Payroll

  • Best if you already use QuickBooks
  • Simple payroll tied to accounting
  • Good for small teams
Best for hourly / restaurant / retail teams

ADP RUN

  • Reliable, widely used
  • Good compliance support
  • Better if payroll gets messy or you have multiple states
Best budget option

Patriot Payroll

  • Lower cost
  • Basic but solid
  • Good if you mainly need straightforward payroll
If you have international employees/contractors

Deel or Remote

  • Best for global payroll and contractor payments
  • Strong compliance for cross-border hiring
Quick pick
  • 1–50 employees, US only: Gusto
  • Fast-growing / need HR + IT: Rippling
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Need enterprise-style support: ADP RUN
  • Global team: Deel

If you want, I can narrow it down to the best 3 options for your business if you tell me: 1) country, 2) number of employees, 3) hourly vs salaried, 4) whether you need HR/benefits.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

If you want the safest default for most small businesses: Gusto.

Best picks by use case
  • Gusto — best overall for small businesses; easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks Online for accounting.
  • Rippling — best for growing companies that want payroll + HR + IT/device management in one place.
  • ADP Run — best for larger or more complex payroll needs.
  • Paychex Flex — good if you want a more traditional full-service provider.
  • Justworks — great if you want payroll plus HR/compliance support and PEO-style help.
My quick recommendation
  • 1–20 employees: Gusto
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Fast-growing startup: Rippling
  • Need hands-off full service: ADP Run or Paychex Flex

If you want, I can narrow it to the best 3 for your business if you tell me:

  1. number of employees
  2. state(s) you pay in
  3. hourly vs salaried mix
  4. whether you need benefits / 401(k) / contractor payments.
What are the best payroll platforms for US businesses?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for US businesses, by use case:

  • Gusto — Best overall for most small businesses

Easy setup, great UX, strong payroll + benefits + HR in one place.

  • Rippling — Best for growing teams that want payroll + IT/HR automation

Very powerful if you also need device/app management and complex workflows.

  • ADP Run — Best for larger SMBs wanting a trusted, full-service option

Strong compliance, tax support, and room to scale.

  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting

Smooth bookkeeping sync and simple payroll for small teams.

  • Paychex Flex — Best for businesses that want flexible service levels

Good payroll, HR, and tax support with more hands-on help available.

  • OnPay — Best value for small businesses and nonprofits

Straightforward pricing, solid payroll/HR, and strong customer support.

  • Square Payroll — Best for retail, restaurants, and hourly teams

Great if you already use Square POS and need easy hourly payroll.

  • Patriot Payroll — Best low-cost basic payroll

Simple, budget-friendly, and good for straightforward payroll needs.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling: Rippling
  • Best accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best hands-on provider: ADP Run or Paychex Flex

If you want, I can also rank these for your business size (1–10 employees, 10–50, 50+) or compare pricing.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For most US businesses, the top payroll platforms are:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small to mid-sized businesses; easy setup, strong benefits, solid HR tools.
  • ADP Run — best for growing businesses that want a more established payroll provider and scalability.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • Rippling — best for companies that want payroll + HR + IT/device management in one system.
  • Paychex Flex — good for businesses that want payroll with HR support and can scale up.
  • OnPay — great value for small businesses; simple pricing and strong contractor/payroll support.
  • Square Payroll — best for hourly/retail/restaurant teams, especially if you use Square POS.
  • Workful — lightweight option for very small businesses.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for growth: Rippling or ADP Run
  • Best budget/value: OnPay

If you want, I can narrow it down by business size, budget, or whether you need W-2s, contractors, benefits, or multistate payroll.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for US businesses, by common use case:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses. Easy payroll, benefits, onboarding, and strong UX.
  • ADP RUN — Best for growing businesses that want a very established payroll provider with lots of support options.
  • Rippling — Best for companies that want payroll + HR + IT/device management in one system.
  • Paychex Flex — Best for businesses that want flexible service levels and access to human support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • OnPay — Best value for small businesses that want solid payroll and HR features without complexity.
  • Square Payroll — Best for restaurants, retail, and other hourly-workforce businesses already using Square.
  • Patriot Payroll — Best low-cost option for very small businesses.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best enterprise-grade: ADP RUN
  • Best all-in-one: Rippling
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. a top 5 comparison chart, or
  2. the best payroll platform for your business size/industry.
Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for US businesses:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses. Easy setup, strong payroll + HR, great UI, solid benefits support.
  • Rippling — Best for all-in-one HR/IT/payroll. Powerful automation and good for growing companies.
  • ADP Run — Best for established small businesses that want a trusted, full-service option.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting. Simple and tightly integrated.
  • Paychex Flex — Best for small to mid-sized businesses needing flexible payroll and HR tools.
  • OnPay — Best value for small businesses. Clean, straightforward, and usually lower cost than bigger suites.
  • Square Payroll — Best for hourly businesses, restaurants, and retail, especially if you already use Square.
  • Paylocity — Best for mid-market companies wanting stronger HR, benefits, and employee self-service.

Quick pick:

  • Small business: Gusto or OnPay
  • Growing company: Rippling
  • Need a big-name provider: ADP Run or Paychex Flex
  • Using QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for 1099 contractors.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are some of the best payroll platforms for US businesses, depending on your needs:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small to mid-sized businesses. Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits + HR, very user-friendly.
  • Rippling — Best for companies that want payroll tied to IT/HR automation. Great if you also manage devices, apps, and onboarding.
  • ADP Workforce Now — Best for larger businesses or those needing enterprise-grade payroll, compliance, and reporting.
  • Paychex Flex — Strong all-around option for small to mid-sized businesses, especially if you want payroll plus HR support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting. Simple and convenient for small businesses.
  • OnPay — Great value for small businesses. Clean interface, solid payroll + HR, and straightforward pricing.
  • Square Payroll — Best for hourly businesses, retail, restaurants, and teams already using Square.
  • SurePayroll — Good budget-friendly option for very small businesses and basic payroll needs.

My quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scaling/automation: Rippling
  • Best for enterprise: ADP
  • Best for bookkeeping integration: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform by business size (1–10 employees, 10–50, 50+) or by industry.

What are the best payroll platforms for contractors?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for contractors, depending on your needs:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses paying U.S. contractors. Easy 1099 setup, automated payouts, and good tax form support.
  • Deel — Best for international contractors. Strong global payments, multi-currency support, and contractor compliance tools.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one platform. Great automation, but pricier.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks. Simple contractor payments and clean accounting sync.
  • Zenefits — Good for mixed teams of employees and contractors, with decent payroll add-ons.
  • Paychex Flex — Better for larger businesses that need more robust payroll and compliance support.
  • Papaya Global — Best for global contractor payroll at scale.
  • ADP Run — Reliable, widely used, and solid for growing businesses that want a traditional payroll provider.

My quick picks:

  • Best for most small businesses: Gusto
  • Best for international contractors: Deel
  • Best for accounting sync: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for automation: Rippling

If you want, I can also narrow this down by budget, number of contractors, or whether you pay U.S. or international contractors.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for contractors / 1099 workers:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for small businesses paying contractors. Easy setup, direct deposit, 1099 filing, solid UX.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks. Strong contractor payments + accounting integration.

  1. Rippling

Best for growing teams that need payroll, HR, and device/IT management together. Powerful, but pricier.

  1. Deel

Best for paying international contractors. Great for cross-border payments, compliance, and multi-currency support.

  1. ADP Run

Best for more established businesses wanting a trusted, full-service payroll provider.

  1. OnPay

Best value option. Simple, affordable, and handles contractor payments well.

  1. Wave Payroll

Best budget pick for very small businesses, especially if you want a lightweight setup.

Quick picks
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for global contractors: Deel
  • Best value: OnPay

If you want, I can also give you the best option by company size or a side-by-side price comparison.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for contractors, depending on your needs:

Best overall: Deel
  • Great for 1099 contractors and global contractors
  • Handles onboarding, contracts, payments, and compliance
  • Strong if you pay people in multiple countries
Best for small U.S. teams: Gusto
  • Easy to use
  • Great for paying U.S.-based contractors
  • Good mix of payroll, benefits, and tax forms
Best for global contractor payments: Remote
  • Excellent for international contractor management
  • Strong compliance tools
  • Simple contractor payments in multiple currencies
Best for enterprise or complex compliance: Rippling
  • Powerful automation
  • Good if you need payroll, HR, IT, and contractor management in one system
  • Better for growing companies
Best budget-friendly option: Wave Payroll
  • Good for very small businesses
  • Affordable, but less robust than others
  • Best if you only need basic contractor payment features
Best for bookkeeping + contractor payments: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Strong if you already use QuickBooks
  • Easy tax and accounting integration
  • Works well for U.S. contractors
Quick pick guide
  • Best overall: Deel
  • Best U.S. small business: Gusto
  • Best international: Remote
  • Best for scale: Rippling
  • Best with QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you the best platform by company size, country, or budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For contractor payroll, the best platforms are usually the ones that handle 1099 payments, contractor onboarding, tax forms, and multi-currency payouts well.

Best overall
  • Gusto — best for small businesses paying a mix of W-2 employees and contractors. Easy, polished, and strong 1099 support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting. Good contractor payments and tax prep.
  • Rippling — best for teams that want payroll + HR + device/app management in one system. More powerful, pricier.
  • Papaya Global — best for international contractor payments and global compliance.
  • Deel — best for hiring and paying contractors worldwide. Excellent for cross-border payments and contracts.
Best for pure contractor payments
  • Bill.com — strong AP/workflow tools for paying vendors and contractors.
  • Tipalti — best for larger businesses with lots of contractor payments and automation needs.
  • Bonsai — great for freelancers and small agencies managing contracts, invoicing, and contractor payments.
Best value/small business
  • Gusto
  • QuickBooks Payroll
  • Bonsai if you’re mostly paying freelancers
What to look for
  • 1099-NEC filing
  • Direct deposit/ACH
  • Contractor self-onboarding
  • Multi-state or global compliance
  • Accounting integrations
  • Bulk payments

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your business size or compare Gusto vs Deel vs Rippling.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for contractors, depending on your needs:

  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses paying W-2s and 1099 contractors. Easy setup, strong tax forms, good UI.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting. Good contractor payments and 1099 reporting.
  • Rippling — Best for growing companies. Strong automation, contractor management, and global workforce tools.
  • Deel — Best for paying international contractors. Great for cross-border payments, contracts, and compliance.
  • Remote — Another strong choice for global contractors, with solid compliance and contractor onboarding.
  • Papaya Global — Best for larger businesses with lots of international contractor payments.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — Best for companies that want a more traditional, enterprise-grade payroll provider.
  • Square Payroll — Good for small businesses and hourly teams that also pay contractors.
  • OnPay — Great value for small businesses needing simple contractor payroll.
  • Zenefits Payroll (TriNet Zenefits) — Good HR + payroll combo, though less contractor-focused than Deel/Rippling.
Best picks by use case
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for global contractors: Deel
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for automation/scaling: Rippling
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your business size or compare domestic vs international contractor payroll.

What are the best payroll platforms for multi-state payroll?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the best payroll platforms for multi-state payroll:

  1. ADP Workforce Now

Best overall for large or complex multi-state teams. Strong compliance, tax filing, and state/local payroll support.

  1. Paychex Flex

Great for small to mid-sized businesses. Solid multi-state tax handling and good HR add-ons.

  1. Gusto

Best for smaller businesses and startups. Very easy to use, and it handles multi-state payroll well for simpler setups.

  1. Rippling Payroll

Excellent if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system. Strong for distributed teams and multi-state automation.

  1. Paycom

Good for mid-market companies that want a more unified platform and strong employee self-service.

  1. Workday Payroll

Best for enterprise companies with very complex payroll and HR needs across many states.

Quick picks
  • Best overall: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best for ease of use: Gusto
  • Best for automation: Rippling
  • Best for mid-size businesses: Paychex Flex

If you want, I can also give you the best option by company size or a feature-by-feature comparison.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For multi-state payroll, the best platforms are usually the ones that handle:

  • state/local tax registration & filing
  • state-specific labor law compliance
  • multi-jurisdiction payroll taxes
  • remote employee onboarding
  • solid HR + benefits integrations
Best payroll platforms for multi-state payroll
1. ADP Workforce Now

Best for: larger teams, complex multi-state payroll, enterprise compliance Why it stands out: very strong tax filing/compliance coverage across states, lots of integrations, scalable as you grow. Good if: you want a proven, full-featured platform and don’t mind a more traditional enterprise experience.

2. Paychex Flex

Best for: small to mid-sized businesses that need strong tax support Why it stands out: reliable multi-state payroll, good compliance help, and strong customer support options. Good if: you want a balance of usability and compliance without going fully enterprise.

3. Gusto

Best for: small businesses and startups with employees in multiple states Why it stands out: easy setup, good state tax handling, clean UI, and strong automation for payroll + benefits. Good if: you want the simplest platform that still handles multi-state payroll well.

4. Rippling

Best for: fast-growing companies with distributed teams Why it stands out: excellent for managing payroll, HR, IT, and onboarding in one system; strong for remote/multi-state workforces. Good if: you need payroll tied closely to employee lifecycle management.

5. Paylocity

Best for: mid-market companies needing HR + payroll + engagement tools Why it stands out: good multi-state payroll support, modern interface, and strong HR features. Good if: you want a more modern alternative to legacy payroll systems.

6. QuickBooks Payroll

Best for: very small businesses already using QuickBooks Why it stands out: simple setup and native accounting integration. Caveat: fine for basic multi-state payroll, but not as robust as ADP, Paychex, or Rippling for complex compliance. Good if: you’re small and want convenience.

My quick recommendations
  • Best overall for complex multi-state payroll: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best for ease of use: Gusto
  • Best for fast-growing distributed teams: Rippling
  • Best for SMB support and tax filing: Paychex Flex
What to watch for

When comparing platforms, ask whether they:

  • automatically register and file in new states
  • handle state unemployment insurance (SUI)
  • support local taxes too, not just state taxes
  • manage multiple work locations for one employee
  • offer W-2s, new hire reporting, and garnishments in all states

If you want, I can also give you:

  1. a top 3 by company size, or
  2. a comparison table of pricing/features.
Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

Top payroll platforms for multi-state payroll:

  1. ADP Workforce Now / ADP Run
    • Best overall for complex compliance and large/mid-sized teams
    • Strong state tax filing, garnishment handling, and HR integrations
  2. Rippling
    • Best for automation and multi-state distributed teams
    • Excellent for onboarding, device/app access, and payroll tied to employee location
  3. Paychex Flex
    • Strong for SMBs needing solid multi-state tax support
    • Good service model and compliance help
  4. Gusto
    • Best for small businesses
    • Very easy to use, handles multi-state payroll well, and includes tax filing
  5. Paylocity
    • Good for growing companies
    • Strong HR + payroll combo with multi-state capabilities
  6. Workday Payroll
    • Best for enterprise
    • Powerful, but usually overkill unless you have a large HR/finance stack

Quick pick:

  • Small business: Gusto
  • Fast-growing / remote team: Rippling
  • Complex compliance: ADP
  • Hands-on service: Paychex

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for 10 / 50 / 500 employees.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For multi-state payroll, the best platforms are usually:

  1. ADP Workforce Now
    • Best for: larger teams, complex compliance, multi-state tax handling
    • Strengths: strong tax support, state/local filings, scalable HR/payroll
  2. Paychex Flex
    • Best for: SMBs to mid-market
    • Strengths: solid multi-state payroll, good compliance help, strong service/support
  3. Gusto
    • Best for: small businesses and startups
    • Strengths: easy setup, good multi-state payroll, very user-friendly
  4. Rippling
    • Best for: modern companies with distributed teams
    • Strengths: great for multi-state employees, automated onboarding, HR + IT in one system
  5. UKG Ready
    • Best for: companies needing deeper workforce management
    • Strengths: strong payroll, time tracking, scheduling, and compliance tools
  6. Paylocity
    • Best for: mid-sized businesses
    • Strengths: good multi-state payroll, strong employee self-service, HR features
Quick picks
  • Best overall for complexity: ADP Workforce Now
  • Best easy-to-use option: Gusto
  • Best for distributed teams: Rippling
  • Best service/support: Paychex Flex

If you want, I can narrow this down by company size, budget, or whether you need contractor + employee payroll.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For multi-state payroll, the best platforms are usually the ones with strong tax filing, local withholding, new-hire reporting, and compliance support across all 50 states.

Best overall
  • Gusto — Great for small to mid-sized teams; easy multi-state payroll, strong automation, and good compliance tools.
  • ADP Workforce Now — Best for larger companies; very strong multi-state tax and compliance handling.
  • Paychex Flex — Solid all-around choice, especially if you want payroll plus HR and tax support.
  • Rippling — Excellent if you want payroll tied tightly to HR, IT, and benefits; strong for distributed teams.
  • Paycom — Good for medium to large businesses that want an all-in-one system with strong compliance.
Best by business size
  • Small business: Gusto, OnPay
  • Mid-market: Rippling, Paychex Flex
  • Enterprise: ADP Workforce Now, Ceridian Dayforce, UKG Pro
Best for compliance-heavy multi-state payroll
  • ADP
  • Ceridian Dayforce
  • UKG Pro
Best if you have remote employees in many states
  • Rippling
  • Gusto
  • Deel (best if you also pay international contractors/employees)
Quick recommendation

If you want:

  • simple + affordableGusto
  • best enterprise-grade complianceADP Workforce Now
  • best modern all-in-one platformRippling
  • strong service + payroll expertisePaychex Flex

If you want, I can also give you a ranked shortlist based on company size, budget, and whether you need HR/benefits too.

What are the best payroll platforms for hourly employees?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For hourly employees, the best payroll platforms usually combine payroll + time tracking + scheduling + tip/overtime handling. Top picks:

  1. Gusto
    • Best overall for small and midsize businesses
    • Strong payroll automation, time tracking, and employee self-service
    • Good for teams that need easy setup and clean UI
  2. ADP RUN
    • Best for larger or growing hourly workforces
    • Solid compliance, tax filing, and HR tools
    • Good if you need scalable reporting and more advanced payroll controls
  3. QuickBooks Payroll
    • Best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Strong for hourly payroll, overtime, and bookkeeping sync
    • Easy choice for businesses that want accounting + payroll in one place
  4. Paychex Flex
    • Best for businesses needing flexible payroll and HR support
    • Good time tracking and compliance features
    • Useful for more hands-on service and industry-specific needs
  5. Homebase
    • Best for retail, restaurants, and shift-based hourly teams
    • Excellent scheduling, time clocks, and payroll integration
    • Not always the best standalone payroll, but great for hourly operations
  6. Rippling
    • Best for tech-forward businesses with complex workflows
    • Payroll, HR, IT, and device management in one platform
    • Strong automation, but can be more than some small businesses need
  7. OnPay
    • Best budget-friendly option
    • Simple payroll with good support for hourly workers and contractors
    • Great value for smaller businesses

Best picks by use case

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scheduling-heavy hourly teams: Homebase
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for scaling: ADP RUN or Rippling
  • Best value: OnPay

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platforms for restaurants, retail, or construction hourly workers specifically.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For hourly employees, the best payroll platforms are usually the ones that combine payroll + time tracking + scheduling.

Top picks
  • Gusto — best overall for small businesses

Clean UI, solid payroll, time tracking integrations, benefits, and great for hourly teams.

  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks

Strong for time syncing, tax filing, and accounting integration.

  • ADP RUN — best for growing businesses

More robust HR/payroll features, good compliance tools, scalable.

  • Paychex Flex — best for mixed hourly/shift teams

Good payroll, scheduling, and HR support with more service options.

  • Homebase — best for hourly scheduling + payroll

Especially strong for restaurants, retail, and other shift-based businesses.

  • When I Work — best for scheduling-heavy teams

Great for shift workers; pairs well with payroll platforms.

Best choice by business type
  • Small hourly team: Gusto
  • Already on QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Need strong support/compliance: ADP RUN or Paychex Flex
  • Restaurant/retail shifts: Homebase
What to look for
  • Automatic overtime calculation
  • Time clock integration
  • Tip tracking
  • Schedule syncing
  • Payroll tax filing
  • Direct deposit and mobile access

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platforms for restaurants, retail, or construction workers specifically.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For hourly employees, the best payroll platforms are the ones that handle time tracking, overtime, scheduling, tips, and labor compliance well.

Best overall

Gusto

  • Great for small to mid-sized businesses
  • Strong payroll + benefits + HR
  • Easy hourly time tracking and automatic payroll runs
  • Best if you want simple and clean
Best for time clocks + scheduling

Homebase

  • Excellent for hourly teams, retail, food service, and local businesses
  • Built-in scheduling, time clock, PTO, and payroll
  • Very strong for shift workers
Best for larger hourly teams

ADP RUN

  • Solid payroll, tax filing, and compliance tools
  • Better for growing businesses with more complex payroll needs
  • Good support and scalability
Best for restaurants and tipped workers

Toast Payroll

  • Ideal if you run a restaurant or food business
  • Works well with tips, shifts, and POS integration
  • Best when paired with Toast POS
Best budget option

QuickBooks Payroll

  • Good if you already use QuickBooks
  • Easy for basic hourly payroll and tax filing
  • Best for small businesses with simpler needs
Best for all-in-one workforce management

Paychex Flex

  • Strong payroll, HR, and compliance
  • Good for businesses that need more than basic payroll
  • Useful for hourly and mixed salaried/hourly teams
Quick picks by business type
  • Small business: Gusto
  • Shift-based business: Homebase
  • Restaurant/tipped staff: Toast Payroll
  • Growing company: ADP RUN
  • Bookkeeping-first: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you the best 3 based on your business size, industry, and budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For hourly employees, the best payroll platforms are the ones that handle time tracking, overtime, schedules, and fast pay runs well.

Top picks
  • Gusto — Best overall for small businesses with hourly staff. Easy payroll, good time tracking, overtime handling, and solid HR extras.
  • Homebase — Best for hourly teams that need scheduling + time clocks + payroll in one place.
  • Square Payroll — Best for restaurants, retail, and businesses already using Square POS.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting.
  • ADP Run — Best for growing businesses that want a more robust, established payroll system.
  • Rippling — Best for businesses that want payroll plus strong HR, onboarding, and automation.
  • Paychex Flex — Good all-around option for hourly workers, especially if you want payroll with compliance support.
  • OnPay — Strong value pick for small businesses with hourly employees and simple payroll needs.
What matters most for hourly teams

Look for:

  • Time clock integration
  • Overtime and break rules
  • Tip reporting if you’re in food service
  • Scheduling
  • Mobile app for employees
  • Automatic tax filing
Quick recommendation
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scheduling-heavy hourly teams: Homebase
  • Best for retail/restaurants: Square Payroll
  • Best for accounting users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform by business type (restaurant, construction, retail, healthcare, etc.).

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For hourly employees, the best payroll platforms usually combine time tracking, tip/overtime handling, scheduling, and payroll taxes.

Top picks
  • Gusto — best overall for small businesses

Easy to use, strong payroll automation, good for hourly workers, overtime, and basic HR.

  • ADP Run — best for scaling businesses

More robust compliance and support; great if you expect to grow or need more advanced payroll.

  • Paychex Flex — best for mixed hourly teams

Solid time tracking, payroll, and HR tools; good for restaurants, retail, and service businesses.

  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks

Simple setup, good integration with accounting, and easy for small teams.

  • Homebase — best for scheduling + hourly payroll

Great for shift workers, time clocks, and labor management; especially useful for restaurants and retail.

  • OnPay — best value

Affordable, straightforward payroll with strong support for hourly pay and multi-state payroll.

If you run a restaurant or retail business

Look closely at:

  • Homebase
  • Gusto
  • Paychex Flex
If you need enterprise-grade compliance
  • ADP Run
  • Paychex Flex
Quick recommendation
  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scheduling-heavy hourly teams: Homebase
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can narrow it down by business size, industry, and budget.

What are the best payroll platforms for small teams?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto — best overall for most small businesses
    • Easy setup, great UI, solid payroll + HR + benefits
    • Good for teams that want “set it and forget it”
    • Strong choice for 1–50 employees
  2. Rippling — best if you want payroll + IT + HR in one system
    • More powerful, more scalable
    • Great if you need onboarding, device management, permissions, etc.
    • Better for growing startups
  3. QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Clean integration with accounting
    • Good for small teams that want simple payroll and tax filing
    • Best when bookkeeping is already in QuickBooks
  4. OnPay — best value for straightforward payroll
    • Simple pricing, good support, no-frills
    • Great for small businesses that don’t need a lot of extras
  5. Square Payroll — best for hourly teams / retail / restaurants
    • Nice if you already use Square POS
    • Easy for time tracking and tip-heavy businesses
  6. ADP Run — best for businesses that want a more established provider
    • Strong payroll engine and compliance support
    • Can feel a bit more enterprise-like than Gusto

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for growing startups: Rippling
  • Best accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best budget-friendly option: OnPay
  • Best for retail/hospitality: Square Payroll

If you want, I can also rank these by price, ease of use, or best for 1–10 employees.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto — best overall
    • Very easy to use
    • Great for payroll, benefits, and basic HR
    • Strong for startups and teams under ~50
  2. Rippling Payroll — best if you want payroll + IT/HR together
    • Excellent automation
    • Good for growing teams
    • More powerful, but a bit more complex
  3. ADP RUN — best for reliability and compliance
    • Strong tax filing and support
    • Good if you want a big-name provider
    • Can feel pricier than simpler tools
  4. QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks
    • Clean integration with accounting
    • Good for very small businesses
    • Solid for basic payroll needs
  5. OnPay — best value
    • Simple, affordable, and includes payroll + HR basics
    • Great for small teams that want fewer bells and whistles

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best budget/value: OnPay
  • Best for all-in-one ops: Rippling
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform for your team size, budget, and whether you have W-2 employees, contractors, or both.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for small businesses. Easy setup, strong payroll + benefits, and great UX.

  1. Rippling

Best if you want payroll plus HR, IT, and employee management in one system. Very powerful, a bit more complex.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks for accounting. Smooth bookkeeping integration.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for growing small teams that want a trusted, full-service provider. Strong compliance and support.

  1. OnPay

Best value. Simple pricing, solid payroll, and good for teams that want no-fuss payroll.

  1. Patriot Payroll

Best budget option. Good for very small teams that mainly need basic payroll.

  1. Square Payroll

Best for restaurants, retail, and hourly workers—especially if you already use Square.

My quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best all-in-one: Rippling
  • Best cheap/simple: OnPay or Patriot
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you want, I can also rank them by price, ease of use, or best for remote teams.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto — best overall
    • Easy setup, clean UI, solid payroll + benefits + HR basics
    • Great for startups and teams with 1–50 employees
  2. Rippling — best if you want payroll + IT/HR automation
    • Strong all-in-one platform
    • Best when you also need onboarding, device/app management, and workflows
  3. QuickBooks Payroll — best for QuickBooks users
    • Works well if you already use QuickBooks Online
    • Simple payroll, good tax filing, easy accounting sync
  4. OnPay — best value
    • Strong payroll and solid support at a lower cost than many competitors
    • Good for small businesses that don’t need a huge HR suite
  5. ADP RUN — best for compliance and reliability
    • More established, good tax/compliance support
    • Better if you want a trusted enterprise-grade provider, even for a small team
  6. Wave Payroll — best for very small teams on a budget
    • Good if you’re already using Wave accounting
    • Lightweight and affordable

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for automation: Rippling
  • Best for accounting integration: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best budget option: OnPay

If you want, I can also narrow this down by team size, budget, and whether you have W-2 employees, contractors, or both.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

For small teams, the best payroll platforms are usually:

  1. Gusto

Best overall for most small businesses. Easy payroll, benefits, onboarding, and strong UX.

  1. QuickBooks Payroll

Best if you already use QuickBooks. Good for basic payroll and clean accounting sync.

  1. Rippling

Best for growing teams that want payroll + HR + IT in one system. More powerful, a bit more complex.

  1. OnPay

Best value for small businesses. Simple, affordable, and solid for payroll plus HR basics.

  1. ADP RUN

Best for businesses that want a big-name provider with strong support and compliance features.

  1. SurePayroll

Good for very small teams or mostly salaried payroll. Straightforward and budget-friendly.

  1. Deel

Best if you hire international contractors or remote employees across countries.

Quick picks:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Best for scaling: Rippling
  • Best budget option: OnPay
  • Best for global hiring: Deel

If you want, I can also give you the best payroll platform based on team size, budget, and whether you have contractors or employees.

What payroll platforms are worth considering?
5/5 mentions 5 responses
Iteration 1 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the payroll platforms most worth considering, depending on your business size:

  • Gusto — Best all-around for small businesses; easy setup, strong benefits and HR add-ons.
  • Rippling — Best if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; very flexible and powerful.
  • ADP Run — Good for small to mid-sized businesses that want a well-known, scalable option.
  • Paychex Flex — Strong for SMBs wanting payroll plus HR support and compliance help.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — Best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • OnPay — Great value for small businesses; simple, clean, and affordable.
  • Square Payroll — Solid for retail, restaurants, and hourly teams, especially if you use Square POS.
  • UKG Ready — Better for larger teams needing deeper workforce management.

Quick pick:

  • Best overall: Gusto
  • Best for scale: Rippling or ADP
  • Best value: OnPay
  • Best for QuickBooks users: QuickBooks Payroll

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you need HR/benefits too, I can narrow it to 2–3 best options.

Iteration 2 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the payroll platforms most worth considering:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small businesses; easy setup, solid payroll + benefits + HR.
  • Rippling — great if you want payroll tied to IT, HR, and device management; very powerful for growing companies.
  • ADP RUN — strong payroll engine and tax handling; good for small-to-mid-sized businesses that want a big-name provider.
  • Paychex Flex — similar to ADP, often a good fit for SMBs that want payroll plus HR support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks; simple and convenient accounting integration.
  • OnPay — good value for small businesses needing straightforward payroll and benefits.
  • BambooHR Payroll — best when HR is a priority and you want payroll inside an HR-focused system.
  • Workday — more enterprise-grade; worth it for large organizations with complex HR/payroll needs.
  • UKG Pro — strong for larger teams and workforce management.
  • Deel — best for global contractors and international payroll/EOR.

Quick picks:

  • Small business: Gusto or OnPay
  • Growing startup: Rippling
  • Accounting-first: QuickBooks Payroll
  • Enterprise: ADP, Workday, or UKG
  • Global hiring: Deel

If you want, I can narrow this down based on your company size, country, and whether you need contractors, benefits, or multi-state payroll.

Iteration 3 of 5 Mentioned

A few payroll platforms are worth a serious look, depending on your size and needs:

  • Gusto — great for small businesses; easy UI, solid payroll + benefits + HR.
  • Rippling — strong all-in-one option if you want payroll tied to IT/HR/device management.
  • ADP Run — reliable for small businesses; good compliance and support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • Paychex Flex — good for SMBs that want hands-on service.
  • Square Payroll — simple choice for hourly teams and businesses already on Square.
  • OnPay — affordable, straightforward payroll for small teams.
  • Deel — best for global contractors and international payroll.
  • Workday — enterprise-grade payroll/HR for larger companies.
  • UKG — strong for workforce management + payroll in larger orgs.

If you want, I can narrow this down to the best 3 for your company size, country, and budget.

Iteration 4 of 5 Mentioned

Worth considering:

  • Gusto — best all-around for small businesses; easy UI, solid payroll + benefits.
  • Rippling — great if you want payroll tied to HR, IT, and device management.
  • ADP RUN — strong for reliability and compliance; good if you expect to grow.
  • Paychex Flex — good full-service option, especially if you want more hand-holding.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • OnPay — simple, affordable, and strong for smaller teams.
  • Square Payroll — good for retail/restaurant businesses already using Square.
  • Zenefits (TriNet Zenefits) — useful if payroll is part of a broader HR stack.
  • UKG Ready — better for mid-market companies with more complex scheduling/time tracking.
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-grade, for larger organizations with complex needs.

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you need HR/benefits/time tracking too, I can narrow it to the best 3.

Iteration 5 of 5 Mentioned

Here are the payroll platforms most worth considering, depending on your size and needs:

  • Gusto — great for small businesses; easy setup, strong UX, solid benefits and HR add-ons.
  • Rippling — excellent if you want payroll + HR + IT in one system; very flexible and modern.
  • ADP Run / ADP Workforce Now — strong all-around choice, especially if you want a well-known, scalable platform.
  • Paychex Flex — good for small to mid-sized businesses that want payroll plus HR support.
  • QuickBooks Payroll — best if you already use QuickBooks accounting.
  • OnPay — simple, affordable, and popular with small businesses.
  • Square Payroll — strong for hourly teams and businesses already using Square.
  • UKG Ready / UKG Pro — better for larger or more complex organizations.
  • Workday Payroll — enterprise-grade, usually for larger companies with complex HR needs.

If you want the shortest shortlist:

  • Best overall SMB: Gusto
  • Best all-in-one: Rippling
  • Best enterprise: ADP or Workday
  • Best if you use QuickBooks: QuickBooks Payroll

If you tell me your company size, country, and whether you need HR/benefits/time tracking too, I can narrow it to 3 best options.

All 72 prompts run for Gusto

LBA — Latent Brand Association (6)

  • 1 What is Gusto known for?
  • 2 What are Gusto's main strengths and weaknesses?
  • 3 Who should use Gusto? Who should avoid it?
  • 4 How does Gusto compare to its main competitors?
  • 5 What do people typically complain about with Gusto?
  • 6 What is a typical payroll platform known for? control

Authority — LLM Authority (50)

  • 1 What are the best payroll platforms for small business owners? discovery
  • 2 What payroll platforms work well for restaurants? discovery
  • 3 What payroll platforms are good for healthcare practices? discovery
  • 4 What are the best payroll platforms for nonprofits? discovery
  • 5 Which payroll platforms are best for construction companies? discovery
  • 6 What payroll platforms are best for restaurants with tipped employees? discovery
  • 7 What payroll platforms are best for accounting firms managing clients? discovery
  • 8 What payroll platforms support contractors and employees? discovery
  • 9 What are the best payroll platforms for hourly and salaried staff? discovery
  • 10 What payroll platforms are good for seasonal businesses? discovery
  • 11 What payroll platforms are best for remote-first companies? discovery
  • 12 What payroll platforms are best for businesses with multiple locations? discovery
  • 13 What payroll platforms are best for international teams? discovery
  • 14 What payroll platforms are easiest to set up? discovery
  • 15 What payroll platforms have strong tax filing support? discovery
  • 16 What payroll platforms include direct deposit? discovery
  • 17 What payroll platforms integrate with accounting software? discovery
  • 18 What payroll platforms are best for benefits and payroll together? discovery
  • 19 What payroll platforms are best for growing companies? discovery
  • 20 What payroll platforms are best for budget-conscious businesses? discovery
  • 21 What are the best alternatives to leading payroll platform options? comparison
  • 22 What are the best payroll platform alternatives for small businesses? comparison
  • 23 How do payroll platform options compare for pricing? comparison
  • 24 Which payroll platforms are better for startups vs established companies? comparison
  • 25 What payroll platforms are best alternatives for remote teams? comparison
  • 26 What payroll platforms are best alternatives for contractor-heavy businesses? comparison
  • 27 What payroll platform options are better for multi-state payroll? comparison
  • 28 Which payroll platforms are best alternatives for international payroll needs? comparison
  • 29 What are the best payroll platforms compared by ease of use? comparison
  • 30 What payroll platforms are best alternatives for companies that need HR features too? comparison
  • 31 How do I fix payroll tax filing errors in a payroll platform? problem
  • 32 How do I run payroll for hourly employees? problem
  • 33 How do I set up direct deposit for employees? problem
  • 34 How do I handle payroll for contractors and employees? problem
  • 35 How do I manage payroll tax withholdings for multiple states? problem
  • 36 How do I automate payroll for a small business? problem
  • 37 How do I avoid payroll mistakes when processing paychecks? problem
  • 38 How do I track PTO in a payroll platform? problem
  • 39 How do I pay salaried employees accurately each cycle? problem
  • 40 How do I correct a missed payroll deposit? problem
  • 41 How much does a payroll platform cost per employee? transactional
  • 42 What is the cheapest payroll platform for small businesses? transactional
  • 43 Is there a free payroll platform for small businesses? transactional
  • 44 What payroll platforms have free trials? transactional
  • 45 What payroll platforms have transparent pricing? transactional
  • 46 What payroll platforms are best value for the money? transactional
  • 47 How much is payroll software for a small team? transactional
  • 48 What payroll platforms charge per payroll run? transactional
  • 49 What payroll platforms include tax filing in the price? transactional
  • 50 What payroll platforms are affordable for startups? transactional

TOM — Top of Mind (15)

  • 1 What are the best payroll platforms for small businesses?
  • 2 What are the top payroll platforms for startups?
  • 3 What payroll platform options are most recommended?
  • 4 What are the most popular payroll platforms for companies?
  • 5 What payroll platforms are best for growing businesses?
  • 6 What are the leading payroll platforms right now?
  • 7 Which payroll platforms are best for remote teams?
  • 8 What are the best payroll platforms for employers?
  • 9 What payroll platform should I use for my business?
  • 10 What are the best payroll platforms for US businesses?
  • 11 What are the best payroll platforms for contractors?
  • 12 What are the best payroll platforms for multi-state payroll?
  • 13 What are the best payroll platforms for hourly employees?
  • 14 What are the best payroll platforms for small teams?
  • 15 What payroll platforms are worth considering?