TrueLayer vs Candis
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
TrueLayer is in steady infrastructure-grind mode — Console roles, mandate management, enterprise limits, geographic expansion.
TrueLayer's recent releases are operational maturity work rather than directional moves: a new Payments Controller role in Console for refund/sweep/payout permissions, mandate visibility and management in Console, the maximum sweeping amount lifted to £1 million for enterprise customers, and HP2 (the hosted payment page) now usable in Germany. The cadence is methodical — small unlocks each month rather than headline releases.
TrueLayer is in the part of the lifecycle where most public releases are about operational depth: more granular admin roles, larger limits, more geographic coverage, more in-Console manageability. That's the right work for a payments infrastructure platform serving fintech and merchant customers, but it doesn't reframe the product. Expect more European market rollouts (HP2 added Germany in February) and continued role/permission granularity.
Watch for the Console product to keep absorbing operational tasks that customers used to do via API only — bulk payout management, more reporting, dispute-style flows. A direction toward 'Console as the primary surface for non-engineering finance ops' is plausible.
Candis extends from AP into procurement — purchase requisitions, auto-tax, and a mobile expense app land together.
Candis is shipping aggressively at the procure-to-pay seam for DACH finance teams. The May releases bring purchase requisitions inside Candis with auto-matching against incoming invoices, automatic tax calculation derived from account tax keys, DATEV-style Automatikkonten support, and a Mobile App 2.0 that lets approvers handle expenses from a phone. The credit-card transaction surface is also being tightened — faster table, better automatching against invoices.
Candis is broadening from 'AP automation for DACH SMBs' into a fuller P2P stack: requisition through invoice through expense, with DATEV at the core of the accounting integration. The DATEV-flavored features (Automatikkonten, account-derived tax rates) signal a deliberate optimization for the German accounting workflow rather than a generic European AP tool. Mobile expense approvals plus central user management across multiple Gesellschaften suggest mid-market multi-entity customers are now the target.
Expect a tighter Bestellanforderungen + budget approval workflow next, with vendor-level controls on top of the new requisitions surface. The DATEV-specific tax automation will likely roll out to all eligible customers within weeks, and at least one more accounting connector (likely an ERP, after Microsoft Business Central and Sage earlier this quarter) should land.
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