The number you're not measuring
Ask most small-business owners what it costs to process an invoice and you'll get a shrug. The honest answer is that it's priced into somebody's salary and you've never broken it out. That's the problem — because at about 150 invoices a month, the math tips and your "free" employee is the second-most expensive part of your AP stack, right after the late fees you don't know you're paying.
How much does manual AP processing actually cost per invoice?
Here's the simple version. A US-based office admin at $25/hr — roughly the median for bookkeeping/billing clerks per the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics — takes roughly 8 minutes per invoice to open it, code it, enter the header and line items into QuickBooks, match it to a PO if there is one, file the PDF, and move on. That's if the invoice is clean, in English, and not a statement summary covering twelve line items from a single vendor.
- 8 minutes × $25/hr ÷ 60 = $3.33 per invoice in direct labor.
- Plus payroll overhead — benefits, taxes, PTO accrual — call that a 1.3× multiplier. Now it's $4.33.
- Then add the invoices that get re-opened because of a typo, a wrong GL code, or a vendor following up on an overdue invoice you already paid but mis-keyed. Industry benchmarks from IOFM's AP performance studies put that rework rate at 10–15%. Round to $5.00 per processed invoice.
At 50 invoices a month that's $250. Annoying, not urgent. At 150 a month it's $750. At 300 a month it's $1,500. Your "we just have Karen do it" line item is suddenly $18,000 a year. Karen doesn't know that. Neither do you. For a real example of what this looks like at scale, see how we automated AP for RLS Construction, LLC — they were burning roughly 15 hours a week on this exact process before the build.
The numbers nobody tracks
The direct-labor math is only the tip. The actual cost of manual AP includes things that never show up on a P&L line:
- Late fees. Invoices sitting in an inbox nobody owns for three weeks. Every 1% late fee on a $5,000 invoice is $50. Five of those a month and you've spent more than most hosted AP tools cost.
- Missed early-pay discounts. 2/10 net 30 is a 36% annualized return. You're leaving that on the table every month.
- Statement reconciliation drift. Vendor statements say one thing, your books say another, you pay the difference on a hunch. Small every time, ruinous in aggregate.
- Opportunity cost. Karen is a smart human. If she's hand-keying invoices, she's not chasing the collections calls that would actually improve cash.
When does automation pencil out?
Rule of thumb: if you're processing more than 100 invoices a month, and a human is typing them in, you're losing money to a process that has been solvable technology for ten years. Below 100 a month, the economics depend on how painful the misses are — late fees and errors tip the math at much lower volumes if your average invoice is large.
We built a small calculator on the AP automation page that takes your actual invoice volume and labor rate and tells you what the real monthly number is. It's not marketing math. It's the same numbers I'd back into if you hired me to scope a build.
Three options, briefly
Option 1 — Hosted SaaS (Bill.com, Melio, etc.). $40–$80 per user per month, plus transaction fees. Good for the common case. Stops being good the moment your workflow doesn't match theirs — line-item splits across jobs, dedicated vendor statement reconciliation, multi-entity routing, lien waivers. You adapt to the tool. (For more on this tradeoff, see our SaaS-vs-custom decision framework.)
Option 2 — Build your own. Hire a contractor or an in-house developer. Great if the thing you want to build is big enough to justify the hire. Most AP workflows aren't. You end up with a half-built tool and a person on payroll who's now a bottleneck.
Option 3 — Custom-built, fully managed. Someone else (hi) writes the software around your specific workflow, hosts it, maintains it, and hands you a monthly line item. Good if your volume is in the 100–2,000 invoice range and you have enough workflow weirdness to make a SaaS painful. Typically $15–40K to build, $2K/mo to run.
The point
The honest math of manual AP is that you're paying for it whether you measure it or not. The question isn't should you automate — it's what tool fits the specific ugly edges of your workflow, because that's where the real cost lives.
Hit the calculator, plug in your real numbers, and see what falls out. If the answer is "stay manual," that's fine — now you know. If the answer is "automate," you've got three options and a ballpark. Want a 20-minute conversation about which one fits your shop? Book a fit call — no slides, no pressure, just numbers.
Written by Shawn Stevens, Founder & Principal Engineer at Solvyr. If you want the studio to build the version of this you actually need, book a 20-minute fit call.