Comparison
Trullion vs Trustpair
T
Trullion
Audit automation that finds fraud the way audits do: as a byproduct of looking properly
VERIFIED JUL 5, 2026
T
Trustpair
Checks that the bank account you're paying actually belongs to the vendor you think it does
VERIFIED JUL 5, 2026
| Pricing model | custom-quote | custom-quote |
| Starting point | No published pricing; quotes are scoped by module (lease accounting, revenue recognition, audit workflows) and contract volume | Enterprise-only custom packages: platform access plus a contracted number of vendor evaluations and account validations per year |
| Best for | Finance teams and audit firms drowning in manual contract data work, who want audit capacity back, with fraud-review depth as the dividend. | Mid-market and enterprise AP teams with thousands of vendors, ERP-driven payment runs, and Nacha compliance obligations to evidence. |
| Countries | United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada | United States, France, United Kingdom, Germany, Canada |
| Editorial score | 6.5/10 | 7.7/10 |
Trullion
Pros
- Source-linking every figure to its underlying document is quietly powerful for fraud review, discrepancies stop hiding in re-keyed data
- Frees audit hours from data entry toward actual examination, which is where fraud gets caught
- Strong user satisfaction scores across review platforms for what it does
Cons
- Not a fraud detection tool, no payroll or transaction anomaly scoring at all
- Aimed at accounting standards compliance, the fraud benefit is real but secondary
- Custom pricing and controller-level buying process put it out of casual reach
Trustpair
Pros
- Validates account ownership, not just account existence, which is the check that actually stops diversion
- Continuous monitoring catches bank-detail edits between onboarding and payment
- The $1M liability backstop puts money behind the accuracy claims
Cons
- Enterprise-only pricing walls off the SMBs who get hit by the same scam
- Value concentrates in companies with large vendor files, at 50 vendors a callback policy does most of this for free
- Deep ERP integration is where the product shines, so lightweight accounting stacks see less of it
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