Invoicing software gets reviewed like accounting software, and that's the mistake. A freelancer doesn't need a general ledger on day one — they need one motion to work: do the job, send the invoice, get paid, and have the record land somewhere it can be found at tax time. Speed of payment beats feature depth every time; an invoice with a working pay button gets settled faster than a prettier one without, and a day of float matters more to a freelancer than any report. The other thing the category is quiet about: the bill is never just the subscription. Payment processing fees stack on top of whatever you pay monthly, and a "cheap" tool with poor payment options can cost you more in fees and late payments than an expensive one saves. We build an invoicing module ourselves, so read this list knowing that — our entry is marked, and every competitor gets its real strength.
How we picked.
- The one-motion test. Invoice, payment, record. How many tools, tabs, and manual steps sit between "job done" and "money recorded"? Every gap is where invoices go stale and follow-ups get forgotten.
- The full cost, fees included. Subscription price is half the bill. We looked at how each tool handles payment processing — because a percentage of every invoice, forever, is often the bigger number.
- Honesty about free. This category has genuinely free options, which is rare. We say which are really free, and what the vendor gets out of it.
As always, every claim here is qualitative. No invented satisfaction scores, and where a competitor is simply good, we say so.
1. Mewayz
Disclosure: Mewayz is our product — judge this entry accordingly.
Mewayz is an all-in-one business platform with 50+ modules on one flat fee, and invoicing and accounting are modules inside it rather than a separate subscription. For a freelancer, the point is the one-motion test: the client in your CRM is the client on the invoice, the payment lands against the same record, and the numbers flow into the same books — no export, no sync, no re-typing the client's address into a second tool. And because the platform charges one flat fee with no per-seat or per-contact pricing, adding a collaborator or a hundred new clients doesn't change the bill.
The honest limitation: dedicated accounting tools go deeper on tax and accountant workflows than we do. If you need your accountant to log in to a tool they already know, or you want the deepest tax-category automation and filing integrations, QuickBooks and Xero are the standards for a reason. Our invoicing is built for freelancers and small teams who want getting paid to live next to the rest of their business, not for complex multi-entity bookkeeping. Also said plainly: invoicing and accounting sit on our paid tiers — the free plan covers Link in Bio, a vCard, an online store, and the website builder.
- Best for: freelancers who want invoicing in the same platform — and on the same flat bill — as their CRM, email, and website.
- Pricing model: one flat fee for the whole platform; payment processing fees from your chosen gateway still apply, as they do everywhere on this list. See pricing.
- Watch out: tax-filing depth and accountant-facing workflows trail QuickBooks and Xero; if your accountant runs your books, ask them first.
2. Wave
Wave's invoicing and accounting are genuinely free — not a trial, not a teaser tier, actually free — and that deserves to be said plainly because it's rare. The model is transparent: Wave makes its money on payment processing and payroll, so the software costs nothing and the fees arrive when you get paid. For a freelancer starting out, it's the most honest zero-dollar option in the category.
- Best for: freelancers and very small businesses that want real invoicing and basic books at no subscription cost.
- Pricing model: free software; revenue comes from per-transaction payment processing fees and paid add-ons like payroll and priority support.
- Watch out: the free model means support is thin unless you pay, some features have migrated toward paid plans over the years, and it's North America–centric. Full comparison in Mewayz vs Wave.
3. FreshBooks
FreshBooks was built for service businesses that invoice for their time, and it still fits that shape best: time tracking flows into invoices, expenses attach to clients and projects, and the whole product is written in plain language for people who don't think of themselves as bookkeepers. Of the dedicated tools here, it's the one that feels most designed for a freelancer rather than an accountant.
- Best for: service freelancers — designers, consultants, writers — who bill time and expenses and want the software to speak human.
- Pricing model: monthly tiers gated by number of billable clients, with payment processing fees on top.
- Watch out: the client caps on lower tiers are easy to outgrow, and the per-client model quietly pushes you up the ladder. We break it down in Mewayz vs FreshBooks.
4. QuickBooks
QuickBooks is the default, and the default has real advantages: nearly every accountant in North America knows it, the tax-category and reporting depth is the benchmark, and the ecosystem of integrations, bookkeepers, and how-to content is unmatched. When your business gets complicated, QuickBooks is rarely the wrong answer — that's precisely how it earned the position.
- Best for: freelancers heading toward a real accounting relationship — or already in one — who want the tool their accountant already uses.
- Pricing model: monthly tiers that climb with features, plus payment processing fees; promotional entry pricing typically steps up after the intro period.
- Watch out: cost creep, and we mean that honestly. The intro price is not the year-two price, features you assumed were included sit in higher tiers, and the bill has a way of ratcheting. It's also more accounting tool than invoicing tool — heavier than a freelancer needs on day one. Details in Mewayz vs QuickBooks.
5. Zoho Invoice
Zoho Invoice is free — genuinely, like Wave — and surprisingly complete: recurring invoices, time tracking, client portal, multi-currency. It exists as a front door to the wider Zoho suite, but taken on its own terms it's one of the best free invoicing tools available anywhere.
- Best for: freelancers who want a free, full-featured invoicing tool and don't mind that it's the on-ramp to a larger suite.
- Pricing model: free; Zoho monetizes when you grow into Zoho Books and the rest of the suite, plus the usual gateway processing fees.
- Watch out: accounting lives next door in Zoho Books, not inside — so the "record" step of the one-motion test eventually means a second product, and the suite's sprawl takes homework to navigate.
6. Bonsai
Bonsai understands something the accounting-first tools miss: a freelancer's money problems start before the invoice. Contracts, proposals, and scopes decide whether you get paid at all, and Bonsai bundles those — templated contracts, e-signatures, proposals, then invoicing and basic finances — into one freelancer-shaped product. The contract-to-invoice flow is its real differentiator.
- Best for: independent freelancers who want contracts, proposals, and invoicing in one tool built specifically for their working life.
- Pricing model: monthly subscription tiers, with payment processing fees on top of the plan.
- Watch out: the accounting side is light — many users still export to a real accounting tool at tax time — and the subscription costs more than the invoicing-only options here.
7. Xero
Xero is QuickBooks' serious rival: real double-entry accounting with a cleaner interface, unlimited users on every plan — rare in this category — and particularly strong footing outside North America, where in several markets it's the accountant's default rather than the challenger.
- Best for: freelancers outside the US, or anyone who wants accountant-grade books with unlimited collaborator access.
- Pricing model: monthly tiers; lower tiers cap the number of invoices and bills per month, with processing fees via connected gateways.
- Watch out: the entry-tier invoice caps are tight for an active freelancer, and like QuickBooks it's an accounting tool first — more system than a solo invoice-sender needs. Comparison here: Mewayz vs Xero.
8. Invoice Ninja
Invoice Ninja is the open-source option, and that's a real virtue, not a curiosity: you can self-host it for free with full features, the code is inspectable, and no vendor can sunset your invoicing or reprice it under you. The hosted version has a workable free tier too. For technical freelancers, the control is the feature.
- Best for: technical freelancers who want ownership — self-hosting, source access, and freedom from vendor pricing decisions.
- Pricing model: open source and free to self-host; hosted plans are cheap with a free tier; payment fees depend on the gateway you connect.
- Watch out: self-hosting means you're the sysadmin — updates, backups, uptime are yours — and the polish and support are community-grade rather than commercial.
How to choose.
- Start from the one-motion test. Walk your real flow — job done, invoice out, payment in, record kept — through each candidate. Count the tabs and the re-typing. If the answer involves three tools and a spreadsheet, the tool failed, whatever its feature list says.
- Price the fee stack, not the subscription. Estimate your yearly invoice volume, apply each tool's processing percentage, and add the subscription. The ranking by real cost will surprise you — free tools with card-heavy payment flows can come out expensive.
- Decide where the rest of your business lives. If invoicing is the only thing you need software for, a free specialist like Wave or Zoho Invoice is hard to argue with. If the invoice is one thread of a business that also needs a CRM, email, and a website, weigh an all-in-one platform — where invoicing is one module among 50+ — against a stack of specialists and subscriptions.
FAQ
What is the best invoicing software for freelancers?
It depends on what surrounds the invoice: Mewayz if you want invoicing inside a flat-fee platform with your CRM, email, and website; Wave or Zoho Invoice for genuinely free invoicing; FreshBooks for time-based service billing; Bonsai for contracts plus invoices; QuickBooks or Xero when accountant-grade books matter; Invoice Ninja if you want open source and self-hosting.
Is there genuinely free invoicing software?
Yes — and not just trials. Wave's invoicing and accounting are free, monetized through payment processing; Zoho Invoice is free as the front door to Zoho's suite; Invoice Ninja is open source and free to self-host. "Free" still isn't zero-cost: you pay processing fees when clients pay by card, on every tool in the category.
How much does invoicing software cost?
The subscription runs from free to a moderate monthly fee across tiers — but the real cost is usually payment processing, a percentage of every card payment forever. Compare the whole stack: subscription plus fees at your actual invoice volume. Mewayz charges one flat fee for the whole platform, invoicing included; gateway processing fees apply there too, as everywhere.
Do freelancers need accounting software or just invoicing?
Start with the invoice; the books can follow. Most freelancers need real accounting the year taxes get complicated — quarterly estimates, deductions worth tracking, or an accountant who wants proper records. The practical move is choosing an invoicing tool whose records can grow into or export cleanly to real books, so tax time is a report, not a reconstruction.
How do I get clients to pay invoices faster?
Mechanics beat willpower: put a pay button on the invoice, request a deposit before starting, state payment terms and late fees in the contract, and turn on automatic reminders the day you set up the tool. Invoices that can be paid in one click get paid measurably faster than invoices that ask the client to go find their banking portal.
The bottom line.
Don't pick invoicing software off a feature grid — every tool here can produce a professional invoice. Pick based on how fast it turns finished work into money in your account, and what the subscription-plus-fees stack costs at your real volume. If the answer you want is "the invoice lives next to the client, the email, and the website, on one flat fee," that's the product we built. Start free, look around, and hold our invoicing to the same standard we held everyone else to above.