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Looking for a Wave Alternative? Here's How to Choose in 2026

  • invoicing
  • freelance
  • opensource
  • accounting

Wave has been a default “free invoicing” pick for years, and for good reason — it bundles invoicing with accounting at no cost. But it isn’t the right fit for everyone, and if you’ve landed here you’re probably weighing a move. This is a practical guide to choosing a Wave alternative: why people switch, what to look for, and the strongest options in 2026.

Disclosure: we build one of the alternatives mentioned below (Inkvoice). The aim here is to help you choose well, not to talk you into anything.

Why people look for a Wave alternative

Common reasons we hear:

  • Data ownership. Wave is closed-source and hosted-only — your invoices and client data live on their infrastructure, and there’s no self-host option. If you want to control where your data sits, that’s a hard limit.
  • Region focus. Wave’s strongest features (especially anything payment- or payroll-related) center on the US and Canada. Outside those, the experience thins out.
  • You want lighter, not heavier. Wave is an accounting suite. If you mostly need to send clean invoices and track who’s paid, a full bookkeeping platform can feel like overkill.
  • Open-source preference. Some people simply prefer software they can read, audit, and run themselves.

If none of those apply to you, Wave may still be a great fit — there’s no need to switch for the sake of it.

What to look for in an alternative

  1. Ownership & portability — can you export everything and leave? Can you self-host if you want to?
  2. The get-paid-faster basics — recurring invoices, quotes/estimates, customer statements, and ideally read receipts so you know an invoice was opened.
  3. Professional output — clean PDF templates, multi-currency, and multiple languages if you bill internationally.
  4. Honest pricing — “free” should mean free, not “free until you hit a feature wall.” Watch for per-transaction fees dressed up as free features.
  5. Right-sized — match the tool to the job. Full accounting if you need books; focused invoicing if you don’t.

The best Wave alternatives in 2026

Alternative Free Open source / self-host Best when you want…
Inkvoice Yes (no caps) Yes — MIT, self-hostable To own your data and keep invoicing simple
Zoho Invoice Yes No A polished hosted free tier
Invoice Ninja Free tier Yes Every feature, and don’t mind setup
FreshBooks Paid No Bookkeeping + invoicing, willing to pay

Inkvoice — if data ownership is the reason you’re leaving

Inkvoice is free, open-source (MIT) invoicing you actually own. It’s the most direct answer to the two most common Wave complaints — ownership and weight. You can self-host it in minutes (Docker, Dokploy, Coolify) or use the hosted version, and either way you can export your data anytime. It’s deliberately lightweight and modern, with the get-paid-faster toolkit built in: recurring invoices, quotes, customer statements, and read receipts. It records payments rather than processing them, so there are no transaction fees — you mark an invoice paid as the money arrives.

Best when: you’re leaving Wave for control and simplicity, not to find a different accounting suite.

Zoho Invoice — the polished hosted pick

If you don’t care about self-hosting and just want a clean, free, hosted invoicing tool, Zoho Invoice is excellent, especially within the Zoho ecosystem. Closed-source and hosted-only, like Wave.

Invoice Ninja — the feature-maximalist open-source option

Open-source with a free tier and self-hosting. Very capable, with more features (and more setup) than a minimal tool. A strong pick if you want maximum control and don’t mind the heavier footprint.

FreshBooks — if you’d actually pay for bookkeeping

Not free, but worth a mention: if your real need is small-business accounting plus invoicing and you’re willing to pay, FreshBooks is a polished option. If “free” is non-negotiable, it’s not the one.

The bottom line

If you’re leaving Wave because you want to own your data and keep invoicing simple, an open-source, self-hostable tool is the natural landing spot — that’s exactly the gap Inkvoice fills. If you want bookkeeping bundled in or the most polished hosted free tier, Zoho or a paid suite may suit you better. Either way, pick the tool that lets you take your data with you.