Sydney, July 11, 2026, 23:10 (AEST)
With the Australian share market shut for the weekend, Xero ASX:XRO ended the week with its clearest move beyond small-business accounting: a A$500-a-month Ultra plan aimed at Australian companies with roughly 20 to 200 staff. Xero is pitching the service as a bridge to enterprise resource planning, or ERP, software that connects finance with wider operations such as payroll, inventory and projects.
The investor case is less about a rush of sign-ups than what each subscription could do to revenue. Ultra costs 3.5 times as much as Xero’s A$143-a-month Ultimate 10 tier, taking the annual customer bill to A$6,000 including goods and services tax, from A$1,716.
| Monthly plan comparison | Ultimate 10 | Ultra |
|---|---|---|
| List price, including GST | A$143 | A$500 |
| Annual customer bill | A$1,716 | A$6,000 |
| Selected reporting tools | 180-day cash forecast; KPI and ratio analysis | Multi-entity consolidation; scenario modelling; advanced forecasting |
| Selected service features | Standard plan access | Priority onboarding and migration; targeted data restore |
Xero finished the year to March with 2.8 million customers in Australia and New Zealand and average revenue per customer, or ARPC, of NZ$48.89 a month. After removing Australia’s 10% GST and applying the NZ$/A$0.91 constant-currency assumption in Xero’s results — a fixed exchange rate used to remove currency swings — Ultra equates to about NZ$500 a month, or 10.2 times regional ARPC. Xero has already identified medium-business products as one route to lift that measure.
The sensitivity below shows gross list value, not a company forecast. It assumes 12 months at full price, excludes GST, uses the same currency assumption and ignores discounts, customer losses and the revenue already generated by subscribers who upgrade.
| Ultra subscriptions | Share of ANZ customer base | Gross annual list value, NZ$m | Gross value as % of FY26 group revenue | Incremental value versus Ultimate 10, NZ$m* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,000 | 0.04% | 6.0 | 0.22% | 4.3 |
| 5,000 | 0.18% | 30.0 | 1.09% | 21.4 |
| 10,000 | 0.36% | 59.9 | 2.18% | 42.8 |
Assumes every Ultra subscription replaces an existing Ultimate 10 subscription. The actual mix of new customers and upgrades is not known.
At 5,000 subscriptions, less than two-tenths of 1% of Xero’s regional customer base, Ultra’s gross annual list value would equal about 1.1% of the company’s NZ$2.75 billion in FY26 operating revenue. The upgrade-only gain would be nearer 0.8%. That makes customer mix more important than the headline sign-up count. Angad Soin, Xero’s Australia and New Zealand managing director and global strategy chief, said growing firms eventually “hit a point where their tools stop growing with them”. SmartCompany
The competitive pitch is narrower than a full ERP. MYOB’s Acumatica product combines accounting with payroll, inventory, projects, customer management and other operations, and is deployed with implementation specialists. Xero is offering a finance-led step with a public monthly price and fewer migration demands. Chief Product and Technology Officer Diya Jolly said Ultra was designed to avoid the “cost, disruption, or implementation lift” associated with enterprise software. MYOB
Ultra’s launch package includes Syft Advanced reporting, consolidated accounts for several entities, scenario modelling, AI-generated insights, priority support and the ability to restore selected data without reversing an entire file. Flexible user permissions, which let companies separate who can enter, approve and complete transactions, are due shortly after launch rather than on day one. Damien Wragg, director and owner of beta customer Trainwest, said: “At no point have I felt like we’ve outgrown Xero.” SMBtech
Xero shares closed at A$73.40 on Friday, up 1.6% from the previous Friday’s A$72.25 close. The S&P/ASX 200 fell 0.4% over the same week, leaving Xero ahead of the broader market by about two percentage points. The stock rose 1.6% on Tuesday, the launch day, but lost 1.3% on Friday. The move was positive, though not a forceful rerating.
But the upside is not automatic. The launch materials gave no beta-program size, customer target or Australian medium-business market share. Some firms may stay on cheaper Xero tiers and add specialist apps, while upgrades from existing subscribers would generate only the smaller incremental amount shown above. Slow adoption would leave little ARPC benefit while requiring Xero to provide the promised onboarding and priority support.
The ASX cash market reopens on Monday, July 13. Xero has no scheduled financial update in the coming week; its next dated investor event is the annual meeting on August 27, followed by half-year results on November 12. Until management releases adoption or conversion figures, Ultra remains a potentially useful price lever, not a number investors can safely insert into FY27 forecasts.