
Multi-entity financial reporting, API-driven BI, and analytical accounting, built for accounting firms and family offices managing complex client portfolios.


Most accounting platforms generate reports. Few generate insight.
Eleven's reporting engine is built around a structural assumption that single-entity tools don't make: that real financial analysis happens across entities, across currencies, and across dimensions that don't fit into a chart of accounts. Whether you're closing books for a single client or building a management pack for a family office, the same reporting layer covers it , without exports, spreadsheets, or version-mismatched workbooks.

Every financial close ends in the same set of reports, Balance Sheet, P&L, Trial Balance, General Ledger, Cash Flow. Most firms generate them by exporting raw data, formatting in Excel, and reconciling versions across team members. Eleven produces all of them directly from the ledger, structured and ready to share.
Reports are generated against live data, with full drill-down to the underlying transactions. Every figure on a Balance Sheet traces back to the journal entries that produced it, no spreadsheet intermediaries, no version mismatch between what's shown to clients and what's in the books. Period comparisons (month, quarter, year) are built in, as are comparative views across periods.
Output formats include PDF and Excel; reports can be shared with view-only access or exported for distribution.

Standardized reports cover compliance. Custom reports cover the questions that don't fit a template, profitability by service line, gross margin by category, revenue concentration by customer, expense trends by department.
Eleven takes a different approach than most accounting platforms here. Rather than locking custom reporting inside a proprietary report builder, Eleven exposes the underlying General Ledger through an API. Firms connect Excel, or their existing BI tool, directly to Eleven, pull live ledger data, and build templates in the environment their analysts already work in.

The limit of standard accounting reports is the chart of accounts. If you want to track profitability by project, by cost center, by client engagement, or by geography, the conventional approach is to bloat the COA with hundreds of sub-accounts, which makes consolidation harder and the books less readable.
Analytical accounting solves this without expanding the COA. Transactions are tagged with structured dimensions, cost centers, projects, departments, revenue streams, anything you define, and reports can be sliced by any combination of those dimensions. The chart of accounts stays clean; the analytical layer carries the granularity.
For accounting firms, this means generating management reports that look nothing like the statutory ones, from the same underlying data. For family offices, it means tracking performance across asset classes, geographies, or family branches without restructuring the ledger. Budget-versus-actual comparisons run against the same dimensional structure.

Analysis dimensions are the building blocks of Eleven's analytical reporting. Where most platforms offer one or two analytical fields (typically a cost center and a project code), Eleven lets you define an arbitrary number of dimensions and assign multiple values per transaction.
A single invoice might be tagged with a cost center, a project, a geography, a campaign, and a custom client-specific dimension, all without modifying the chart of accounts. Reports can then filter or pivot on any of those dimensions independently or in combination.
This matters most for firms with diverse client bases. The dimensions a consulting firm needs to track are different from those a real-estate holding company needs, which are different from those a family office needs. Rather than forcing every client into the same analytical structure, dimensions are configured per entity, but reporting still consolidates cleanly across the portfolio.
Standardized reports (Balance Sheet, P&L, etc.) are consistent across clients, with options for branding and layout adjustments. For client-specific custom reporting, firms typically connect Excel or their BI tool to Eleven's API and build bespoke templates that pull live data from each client's ledger.
Eleven is designed for firms managing many client entities from one platform. Reports can be generated per entity, and accountants can move between entities without juggling separate logins or instances. Eleven does not currently provide automated group consolidation (intercompany eliminations, consolidated financial statements) — firms needing formal consolidation typically build it in Excel using API-fed data from Eleven.
Reports can be exported as Excel and sent to clients as part of regular reporting packs.
Standardized reports follow accounting conventions and are generated directly in Eleven, ready out of the box, with no setup required. Custom reports use the same underlying ledger data but are built outside Eleven, using the API to pull data into Excel or BI tools where your team designs the template. Most firms use standardized reports for compliance and the API-driven approach for management or analytical reporting.
Immediately. There's no overnight processing. Transactions posted to the ledger appear in reports within seconds. This matters for firms running close in compressed timelines or for family offices tracking real-time portfolio activity.