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Intuit Stock Rises As QuickBooks Workforce Pushes Into Payroll And HR
7 May 2026
2 mins read

Intuit Stock Rises As QuickBooks Workforce Pushes Into Payroll And HR

Mountain View, California, May 7, 2026, 11:09 PDT

  • Intuit rolled out QuickBooks Workforce, tapping AI for its new human capital management tool aimed squarely at small and mid-sized U.S. businesses.
  • QuickBooks is now stepping past payroll, adding features for hiring, onboarding, benefits, time tracking, and performance management.
  • Intuit rose roughly 4.8% in afternoon trading, with investors looking ahead to the company’s fiscal Q3 report set for May 20.

Intuit Inc. rolled out QuickBooks Workforce in the U.S., making a sharper move to expand from small-business accounting into payroll and HR as the software sector scrambles to keep up with new AI-powered rivals. The company says the new product targets small and mid-market firms, and will be integrated into QuickBooks Online, QuickBooks Online Advanced, and Intuit Enterprise Suite.

Timing is crucial here. Intuit’s fiscal Q3 ends May 20—the one that includes the U.S. tax rush and typically delivers its heaviest sales. Wall Street is still trying to gauge if AI can actually boost demand for software firms like this, or if it could push some of their legacy products closer to obsolescence.

Intuit shares climbed 4.8% to $407.23, not far from their session peak at $411.67. Payroll firms ADP and Paychex moved higher as well, adding 3.3% and 3.5%, respectively.

QuickBooks Workforce packs everything from recruiting and onboarding to payroll, time tracking, benefits, compliance, and performance management into a single platform. Human capital management—HCM—is the catchall term for software handling employee management, from hiring to pay, benefits, and performance reviews.

David Hahn, who heads up Intuit’s services group as EVP and GM, described the rollout as the “most significant evolution” of the company’s HCM suite since QuickBooks Online hit the market 25 years back. According to Intuit, the new platform leans on virtual AI agents—including a payroll agent designed to gather and verify time data, spot errors, and handle payroll for business owners. QuickBooks

Intuit’s new product expands on QuickBooks Payroll, a platform the company says pays 18 million U.S. workers. The rollout will happen across three subscription levels: Workforce Payroll, Workforce Premium, and Workforce Elite. Current QuickBooks Payroll users will see new features show up according to whichever tier they’re already on.

Intuit’s logic here is straightforward: capture more of the workflow inside QuickBooks. The company offers accounting, payments, bill pay, and lending services already. Layering in additional HR features could lock in users, making it tougher for them to switch and opening more doors for Intuit to upsell pricier product tiers.

This move throws Intuit into sharper competition with ADP, Paychex, and Workday—names entrenched in payroll, HR, workforce management, and HCM tech. ADP pitches its AI-powered tools for payroll, HR, talent and benefits; Paychex runs an HR and payroll platform spanning multiple business sizes; Workday, meanwhile, pushes its HCM suite, touting AI agents.

Emily Radaker, CFO at MEC Inc., an electrical services and construction company, described the product as a way to shift their time tracking and HR information straight into payroll—delivering a live snapshot of labor costs. “Accuracy and efficiency,” she said, are “essential” for a business like theirs. Intuit Inc.

Intuit’s AI investments keep climbing, with fresh spending across TurboTax, Credit Karma and QuickBooks. Back in February, CFO Sandeep Aujla told Reuters over 3 million customers were working with its AI agents. He also made it clear: Intuit pays OpenAI and Anthropic for tech, not through any revenue-sharing setup.

The rollout remains just a product promise for now, not evidence of demand. Intuit flagged that features could shift, with some potentially subject to added terms, fees, or eligibility requirements. Investors are also staring down a short-term margin concern: back in February, the company projected third-quarter adjusted profit would fall short of Wall Street’s forecast, citing increased tax-season spending on marketing and customer support.

Back in February, Intuit stuck with its forecast for fiscal 2026 revenue, calling for $20.997 billion to $21.186 billion—an increase of roughly 12% to 13%. Non-GAAP EPS is still targeted at $22.98 to $23.18. The Global Business Solutions division, which covers QuickBooks, posted an 18% jump in second-quarter revenue, landing at $3.2 billion. Online services also moved up 18%, helped by stronger demand in both money and payroll products.

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