
I appreciate most about Adagio Accounting is that it’s powerful, stable, and highly customizable without the bloat and complexity of a full ERP. The customization of the general ledger and reporting is unmatched for a system at this level, allowing us to tweak account structures, design department-specific financial statements, and create exactly the reports our leadership and auditors need. This flexibility has been a game-changer for analyzing and presenting finances. Adagio is also rock-solid stable, even with high transaction volumes. Unlike lighter accounting tools, Adagio handles heavy AP/AR volume and multi-department transactions smoothly, making it incredibly reliable day-to-day. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.
I find the user interface of Adagio Accounting looks and feels legacy. It's functional but not modern or intuitive. The menus are text-heavy, and navigation can be rigid, which means new team members take longer to get comfortable compared to newer accounting platforms. The learning curve is steeper than it needs to be. The overall navigation is very menu-driven and text-heavy, with little visual hierarchy. Adagio relies on long lists and nested menus, so new users have to memorize where everything is instead of recognizing it at a glance. The forms and data entry screens feel rigid. Fields are often small, the layout is dense, and there's little flexibility to reorder or hide fields we don't use. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.



