A real estate developer asks their CPA which accounting software they should use. The CPA recommends QuickBooks. It is what they know, it is what most of their clients use, and it is what their firm is set up to support. Six months and three projects later, the developer is running QuickBooks plus four Excel workbooks plus a folder of draw package templates, and the controller is working weekends. The CPA never mentions that this was predictable.
This article covers what your CPA may not tell you about accounting software for real estate developers: where general accounting tools genuinely break, what real estate-specific accounting actually requires, and how to evaluate the alternatives.
Why your CPA defaults to QuickBooks
CPAs recommend QuickBooks because it is the universal language of small business accounting. They can train staff on it quickly, file taxes from its reports, and trust the underlying numbers for entities that fit its model. For a single-LLC operating business, QuickBooks is genuinely the right answer.
Real estate development is not a single-LLC operating business. It is a multi-entity, project-based business with industry-specific workflows that QuickBooks was never designed to handle. The CPA may know this in theory. In practice, they recommend what they know because the alternatives require evaluation work that falls outside their advisory role.
The result is that most real estate developers run on accounting software that was selected to fit the CPA, not the business.
What real estate development accounting actually requires
Real estate development has specific accounting workflows that general accounting tools cannot handle natively. Understanding what these are is the first step in evaluating software properly.
Job costing at the project and cost code level
Real estate development is project-based. Every dollar of cost needs to be tracked against a specific project, a specific cost code, and a specific phase. Budget vs actual reporting runs at the cost code level, not the GL account level. Cost-at-completion forecasts pull from current commitments and projected costs. General accounting tools can simulate this through customer classes and tags, but the workarounds compound as the portfolio grows.
Multi-entity accounting
Real estate development is structured around separate LLCs for liability protection, tax planning, and capital partner structures. A typical mid-size developer has five to fifteen active entities at any given time, with new entities created for each new project and old entities winding down as projects stabilise. General accounting tools were built for one set of books and force a separate company file per entity, with all the manual consolidation work that creates.
Construction draw management
Lender draws are unique to real estate development and a few other capital-intensive industries. The accounting workflow involves mapping costs to lender categories, assembling supporting documentation, tracking partial fundings and retainage, and reconciling lender-funded amounts against project budgets. No general accounting tool handles this natively. Most developers run draws on Excel templates layered on top of QuickBooks.
Loan accounting
Construction loans, mezzanine debt, and equity financing each have their own accounting requirements: interest accruals, capitalised interest tracking, loan fee amortisation, and debt covenant monitoring. General accounting tools handle the basics through manual journal entries. The complexity scales with the loan structure, and the journal entries scale with it.
Capitalisation and tax treatment
Real estate development has specific tax treatment that general accounting tools do not understand: capitalisation of soft costs, percentage of completion vs completed contract method for builders, cost segregation studies, and the tax basis tracking that flows from each. A CPA can handle these at tax time. The challenge is keeping the books in a state that supports the tax work without rebuilding everything every year.
Capital partner and investor reporting
Real estate development typically involves capital partners or equity investors. Each requires reporting tailored to the partnership agreement, with capital account tracking, distribution waterfalls, and IRR calculations. General accounting tools cannot produce this natively. The controller rebuilds investor reports in Excel every quarter.
Where general accounting tools genuinely break
A few specific failure points show up consistently for developers running on QuickBooks or similar:
Five entities is the threshold
QuickBooks can handle one or two entities through separate company files. By five entities, the manual consolidation work consumes 400 to 500 hours of controller time per year. The math is simple: a controller spending one full day per week on consolidation is not doing the strategic work the role exists for.
Draw assembly takes a full day per project per month
Manual draw packaging on Excel templates layered on QuickBooks typically takes six to eight hours per project, per month. For a five-project portfolio, that is a full work week of controller time every month spent on draws. Errors trigger lender rejections and vendor payment delays. The cost of running draws this way is real and recurring.
Cost-at-completion is a spreadsheet project
General accounting tools track posted transactions. They do not track committed costs, project manager forecasts, or projected change orders. Cost-at-completion forecasting requires pulling data from the accounting system into Excel and running the model manually. The number is only as current as the last rebuild.
Audit and capital partner due diligence become painful
When auditors or capital partners ask for drill-down from a financial statement to source documents across multiple entities, general accounting tools struggle to support it. The work that should take minutes takes days. The signal it sends to capital partners is operational immaturity, even when the underlying numbers are correct.
What to look for in accounting software for real estate developers
The right accounting software for real estate developers handles all of the workflows above natively, not through workarounds. When evaluating platforms, walk through these capabilities specifically:
- Native multi-entity accounting with automatic intercompany allocations and consolidated reporting. Five or fifty entities should not require separate company files.
- Job costing at the project and cost code level with real-time budget vs actual and cost-at-completion forecasting. The data should update as transactions post.
- Construction draw management with lender category mapping, automated package generation, and partial funding carryforward.
- Loan accounting with interest accruals, capitalised interest tracking, and debt covenant monitoring.
- Capital partner reporting with capital account tracking, waterfall calculations, and IRR by partner.
- Integration with property management for the handoff when projects stabilise. The chart of accounts should carry through.
- Unlimited-user pricing so capital partners, lenders, and external accountants can have appropriate access without seat fees.
How Elevate approaches accounting software for real estate developers
Elevate Solutions configures accounting software for real estate developers on Acumatica, a cloud ERP platform built on a multi-entity data model with unlimited-user pricing. The platform handles project-based job costing, construction draw management, loan accounting, multi-entity consolidation, and capital partner reporting on one data model.
Founded by CPAs and operating as an Acumatica Gold Certified Partner for nearly 40 years, Elevate handles implementation end to end. Chart of accounts design, cost code structures, draw mapping, multi-entity hierarchy, and capital partner reporting frameworks are configured by people who understand both real estate development and the accounting it requires. The result is a platform configured for the business, not the CPA.
Run your development accounting on real estate-specific software
Elevate has spent nearly 40 years configuring real estate accounting software for developers across residential, commercial, and mixed-use portfolios. We start by understanding your project mix, your entity structure, and where your current setup is creating risk.
Tell us about your portfolio and the workflows costing you the most controller time. Schedule a discovery call.








