One team for every layer of SaaS finance
SaaS revenue should match how your contracts actually work
Annual prepays, onboarding fees, usage tiers, discounts, renewals, and professional services can all affect how revenue is recognized. We help build the structure so ARR, deferred revenue, and financial reporting tell the same story.
Investor-ready metrics start with reliable accounting
MRR, ARR, churn, gross margin, CAC, runway, and customer-level reporting depend on clean data. We connect accounting, billing, payroll, and reporting so leadership can trust the numbers behind the dashboard.
Software taxability changes state by state
SaaS and digital products are not treated the same across the U.S. We help international SaaS companies review nexus, product taxability, exemptions, registrations, and filing obligations before exposure becomes difficult to unwind.
Your U.S. subsidiary needs to connect back to the global group
We help align U.S. bookkeeping, intercompany charges, payroll, revenue reporting, and tax filings with the finance needs of the foreign parent company.
The finance functions SaaS companies outgrow first
Generic accounting breaks when recurring revenue scales.
SaaS companies do not sell a product once and move on. Contracts renew, expand, discount, bundle, pause, and shift across pricing models. If the accounting system cannot follow the commercial model, the numbers start drifting from reality.
For international SaaS companies entering the U.S., the challenge is even sharper. U.S. revenue reporting, state sales tax, payroll, investor reporting, and parent-company visibility all need to work from the same data. Orbiss helps build that structure before the gaps show up in a board deck, diligence request, or state tax notice.
Frequently asked questions
SaaS companies expanding to the U.S. face accounting, tax, and reporting questions that are easy to miss in the early stages.
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The most important issues are usually revenue recognition, deferred revenue, contract review, billing system integration, SaaS metrics, sales tax, payroll for U.S. hires, and parent-company reporting.
International SaaS companies should make sure their U.S. accounting setup can support both tax compliance and investor-style reporting. A basic bookkeeping setup may not be enough once contracts, renewals, discounts, and multi-state sales increase.
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It depends on the state. Some states tax SaaS or certain digital products, while others do not. The answer can also depend on whether the product is downloaded, remotely accessed, bundled with services, sold to businesses, or sold to exempt customers.
International SaaS companies should review state-by-state taxability and economic nexus before assuming software is exempt everywhere.
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ASC 606 requires companies to recognize revenue based on the transfer of promised goods or services to customers. For SaaS companies, that means contract terms matter.
Annual contracts, implementation fees, usage-based pricing, discounts, renewals, service bundles, and contract modifications can all affect revenue timing and reporting. The accounting should reflect the way the company actually delivers value.
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Usually, yes. A first U.S. hire can trigger payroll setup, federal withholding, state tax registrations, unemployment accounts, workers’ compensation, and employee onboarding requirements.
The requirements depend on where the employee works and whether the company is hiring through a U.S. entity, PEO, employer-of-record arrangement, or another structure.
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SaaS companies commonly track ARR, MRR, churn, expansion revenue, gross margin, burn rate, runway, CAC, LTV, headcount, department spend, and cash position.
The right metrics depend on the business model, funding stage, customer base, and reporting audience. The key is making sure the metrics reconcile back to the accounting data.
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Intercompany charges should reflect the actual commercial relationship between the parent and the U.S. subsidiary. This may include management fees, software development services, royalties, cost sharing, or shared employee costs.
The accounting records should support tax filings, transfer pricing, withholding review, and parent-company visibility.
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