Business checking accounts have long been the cornerstone of small business banking. Yet for many financial institutions, these accounts have remained largely unchanged — offering basic transaction tracking and limited digital tools. In an era where small and micro businesses demand more from their financial partners, it’s imperative for banks to evolve their offerings.
Traditionally, business checking accounts were designed around account-analysis features focused on physical item processing, balance reporting, and fee offsets. Over time, treasury and cash management tools were layered in — positive pay, ACH origination, and wire transfers — features that cater more to mid-sized and large businesses.
For the millions of small and micro businesses, these services offer little practical value.
Interviews with our customers reveal that 80–85% of business checking accounts are either free or very basic, with no value-added digital tools. These accounts often serve as pass-through tools — used primarily to deposit payments and occasionally pay bills — not as true operating accounts.
Non-bank platforms have stepped into the gap left by traditional checking accounts, and they’re approaching the same small business customer from two different directions.
Square came in through payments. Starting as a card reader for in-person sales, Square has extended into a full operating system: Square Checking paired with invoicing, payment acceptance, instant access to sales proceeds, working capital through Square Loans, and payroll. For a merchant who already runs sales through Square, opening a Square Checking account is simply a matter of turning it on — and that convenience has made Square one of the fastest-growing primary account providers for micro businesses.
Bluevine came in through lending. It started as an online lender for small businesses and used that relationship to cross-sell a business checking account with high-yield interest, integrated bill pay, accounts payable automation, and a line of credit attached to the deposit account. For a business owner who came to Bluevine for capital and stayed for the checking account, the bank is the add-on, not the starting point.
Both models work because they solve a real problem: the tools a business owner needs to actually run their business — accept payments, send invoices, pay bills, get access to capital — live in one place, and that place is not the traditional bank. Every dollar that moves through Square or Bluevine is a dollar that does not move through a community or regional bank’s checking account, and the deposit, the fee income, and the customer relationship all follow the tools.
The question becomes clear: what if banks could offer the same modern experience — without forcing customers to leave their trusted financial institution?
That’s where Autobooks, integrated within your checking account offering, comes in.
With Autobooks, financial institutions can offer a business checking experience that rivals non-bank platforms — and goes further:
And unlike non-bank challengers, banks can provide:
Re-thinking business checking doesn’t just help the customer — it creates tangible value for the FI:
Most business checking products are designed for commercial banking needs — not for the millions of micro and small businesses that make up the majority of accounts.
What if your bank designed a checking experience specifically for them?
What if those accounts included tools they actually use, and helped them run their business more effectively?
Would more of them be willing to pay for that account?
All signs say yes.
With Smart Checking from Autobooks, financial institutions can finally offer a business checking experience worth paying for — and stay one step ahead of non-bank challengers.