Transitioning to Cloud Accounting: Tally on AWS vs Zoho Books

Guide for Indian SMEs migrating from desktop Tally to cloud accounting. Compares Tally on AWS with Zoho Books for remote collaboration and API integration.

The Desktop Bottleneck

For decades, Indian SME accounting has been defined by a single computer sitting in the corner of the office, running a local instance of Tally.

This setup worked when business was purely physical, but in the modern era, it is a massive bottleneck. Desktop accounting means:

  • The CEO cannot view real-time cash flow or MIS reports from their phone or while travelling.
  • The company cannot hire a remote Virtual CFO or an outsourced accounting firm, as the data is locked on a local machine.
  • Month-end closing is delayed as external auditors wait for Tally backup files (.tbk) to be emailed back and forth.
  • Zero integration with modern banking APIs, payment gateways, or expense management software.

Transitioning to cloud accounting is the mandatory first step for any SME looking to scale, raise funding, or professionalize their finance function.

The Two Paths to the Cloud

For an Indian SME, there are two primary routes to cloud accounting. The choice depends entirely on your current accounting team’s skillset and your appetite for change.

Path 1: Tally on Cloud (AWS/Azure)

If your accounting team has spent 15 years mastering Tally shortcuts and vehemently opposes learning new software, Tally on Cloud is the pragmatic choice.

This involves migrating your existing TallyPrime license and data to a Virtual Private Server (VPS) hosted on Amazon Web Services (AWS) or Microsoft Azure.

  • How it works: Users log into the cloud server via Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) or a secure web browser link. They see the exact same Tally interface they know and love.
  • Pros: Zero retraining required. Fast data entry. Complete compatibility with traditional Indian CA firms who exclusively audit on Tally.
  • Cons: It’s still a legacy desktop app running on a remote screen. It doesn’t have true cloud APIs for seamless integration with modern SaaS tools, and the mobile experience is poor.

Path 2: Cloud-Native (Zoho Books)

If you are willing to embrace modern software, migrating to a true cloud-native platform like Zoho Books (or QuickBooks Online, though Zoho has better Indian compliance localization) is the superior long-term play.

  • How it works: Accessed via any web browser or mobile app. Built from day one for the internet.
  • Pros: Live automated bank feeds (ICICI, HDFC, SBI, Axis). Direct API integration with the GST portal for 1-click GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filing. Automated e-invoicing and e-way bill generation. Beautiful, real-time dashboards for the founder.
  • Cons: Requires retraining your accounting staff. Some traditional CA firms may charge more for the audit if they are unfamiliar with exporting Zoho data to their preferred formats.

Why Cloud Accounting is Mandatory for Virtual CFOs

If you plan to engage a Virtual CFO or an Outsourced Accounting firm, a cloud transition is non-negotiable.

A Fractional CFO cannot guide your business if they are looking at financial data that is 45 days old. Cloud accounting allows the remote finance team to log in simultaneously with your internal operational staff. While your team generates sales invoices in real-time, the outsourced team is reconciling the bank, adjusting depreciation, and preparing the MIS dashboard—all within the same live database.

Making the Transition

Migrating accounting systems should only be done at the start of a new financial year (April 1st) or at the beginning of a new quarter. It requires exporting closing balances, migrating the Chart of Accounts, and setting up new bank feed connections.

Batchwise handles end-to-end cloud migrations as part of our onboarding for all outsourced accounting and Virtual CFO engagements, ensuring zero downtime and complete data integrity.

Frequently asked questions

Can we just use TallyPrime locally like we always have?

You can, but it severely limits your business. Local Tally requires your accountant, auditor, and management to be in the same physical office, or rely on clunky backups sent via email. It prevents real-time bank feeds, limits API integrations for e-invoicing and AP automation, and creates massive data-loss risks if the local server crashes or is hit by ransomware.

What is the difference between Tally on AWS and Zoho Books?

Tally on AWS is the familiar desktop Tally software hosted on a virtual Windows server in the cloud, accessed via Remote Desktop (RDP) or a browser wrapper. It maintains the exact Tally interface and speed your accountants are used to. Zoho Books is a true cloud-native SaaS application accessed via a web browser, featuring modern APIs, automated bank feeds, and mobile apps, but requires retraining your accounting team.

Is cloud accounting secure?

Yes, exponentially more secure than a PC sitting under an accountant's desk. AWS and Zoho employ enterprise-grade encryption, automated daily backups, multi-factor authentication (MFA), and physical data center security. Local PCs are highly vulnerable to ransomware, hard drive failures, and physical theft.