QuickBooks Desktop Payroll in 2026: Pricing, Plans & What Still Works
If you run payroll inside QuickBooks Desktop, the last two years have been confusing. Intuit changed what it sells, raised prices, and sent a lot of mixed messages about the future of the desktop product. Many business owners are now asking a simple question: is QuickBooks Desktop Payroll still worth paying for, and what happens to my payroll if my subscription ends?
This guide gives you straight answers. You’ll see exactly what QuickBooks Desktop Payroll is, the plans available, what each one costs in 2026, how to set it up and run it, and your real options if your payroll subscription is winding down. No fluff, no sales pitch dressed up as advice.
- Still active: QuickBooks Desktop Payroll continues to run for existing subscribers who keep an active payroll subscription
- Subscription required: Payroll is a separate add-on — your Desktop license alone does not run payroll
- Three flavors: Basic, Enhanced, and Assisted, each with a different level of tax handling
- Tied to support windows: Payroll, tax tables, and direct deposit stop working once your version reaches its service sunset
- You have options: renew, move to a no-subscription Desktop license for the accounting side, or switch payroll providers
What QuickBooks Desktop Payroll actually is
QuickBooks Desktop Payroll is a paid service that bolts onto your installed QuickBooks Desktop software. The accounting program handles your books; the payroll add-on calculates employee paychecks, withholds the right taxes, and (depending on your plan) files and pays those taxes for you.
This is the part that trips up new users: buying a QuickBooks Desktop license does not include payroll. Payroll is billed separately, usually as an annual or monthly subscription, often with a small per-employee fee on top. Without an active payroll subscription, QuickBooks can still track your books — it just won’t calculate or file payroll taxes.
That distinction matters for budgeting. A contractor with six employees is paying for two things: the software itself, and the payroll service that keeps tax tables current. If you’re weighing whether to keep paying, it helps to separate those two costs in your head.
The three QuickBooks Desktop Payroll plans
Intuit has offered payroll at three service levels. The difference comes down to how much of the tax work you do yourself versus how much Intuit handles for you.
| Plan | What it does | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Payroll | Calculates paychecks and payroll taxes. You file and pay taxes yourself. No tax forms included. | Owners who work with an accountant who handles filings |
| Enhanced Payroll | Calculates paychecks and taxes, plus completes and e-files federal and state payroll forms (941, 940, W-2, etc.). You stay in control of when payments go out. | Most small businesses that want to run payroll in-house |
| Assisted Payroll | Intuit files and pays your payroll taxes for you and takes on the filing accuracy responsibility. The most hands-off option. | Owners who want to offload tax filing entirely |
For the majority of small businesses, Enhanced Payroll is the sweet spot. It automates the tax math and the forms without the higher cost of a fully managed service. That’s why “quickbooks desktop enhanced payroll” is one of the most searched versions of this product.
QuickBooks Desktop Payroll pricing in 2026
Payroll pricing usually combines a base subscription fee with a per-employee monthly charge. Intuit adjusts these figures periodically, and promotional rates often apply for the first few months before stepping up to the standard price. Always confirm the current number before you commit.
| Plan | Typical structure | Per-employee fee |
|---|---|---|
| Basic Payroll | Annual base subscription | Monthly fee per active employee |
| Enhanced Payroll | Annual base subscription (higher than Basic) | Monthly fee per active employee |
| Assisted Payroll | Monthly base fee (the highest tier) | Per-paycheck or per-employee fee |
If your payroll bill has climbed year over year, you’re not imagining it — pricing on the desktop payroll line has trended upward as Intuit steers customers toward its online products. That cost pressure is exactly why many owners are re-examining whether they need Intuit’s payroll at all, or whether a one-time Desktop license plus a separate payroll tool works out cheaper.
If you want the QuickBooks Desktop accounting software without the ongoing subscription squeeze, we stock genuine no-subscription licenses.
Browse No-Subscription Licenses →Is QuickBooks Desktop Payroll going away?
Here’s the honest picture. Intuit stopped selling new QuickBooks Desktop Pro Plus and Premier Plus subscriptions to most new US customers in 2024, and it has been moving its focus to QuickBooks Online. But “going away” overstates it for current users.
Payroll continues to function as long as two things are true: you keep an active payroll subscription, and your QuickBooks Desktop version is still within its supported service window. Each Desktop version gets roughly three years of service support. Once a version hits its sunset date, connected services — including payroll tax tables, direct deposit, and e-filing — stop working on that version, even if the software itself still opens.
So the practical risk isn’t that payroll vanishes overnight. It’s that an aging version eventually loses the live services payroll depends on. The fix is staying on a supported version and an active subscription, or planning your move in advance.
How to set up payroll in QuickBooks Desktop
Setting up payroll for the first time takes about 30–60 minutes if you have your documents ready. Gather your employer tax IDs, employee details, pay rates, and bank information before you start.
- Open QuickBooks Desktop and go to Employees → Payroll → Turn on Payroll (or activate your purchased payroll subscription)
- Enter your company’s federal and state tax identification numbers
- Add each employee: name, address, Social Security number, pay rate, and pay schedule
- Set up payroll items — wages, salaries, bonuses, and any deductions like health insurance or retirement
- Enter any prior payroll from earlier in the year so year-to-date totals are correct
- Connect your business bank account if you’ll use direct deposit
- Run the built-in payroll setup check to confirm everything balances
Take your time on the prior-payroll step. Getting year-to-date figures right at setup prevents tax-form headaches later.
How to run payroll in QuickBooks Desktop
Once setup is done, a regular pay run is quick.
- Go to Employees → Pay Employees → Scheduled Payroll
- Select the pay schedule and confirm the pay period dates
- Enter hours for hourly staff (salaried employees fill in automatically)
- Review the calculated gross pay, taxes, and deductions for each person
- Click Continue, then review the net pay and employer tax totals
- Choose to print checks or send direct deposit, then submit
What to do if your payroll subscription is ending
If your renewal price jumped, your version is approaching sunset, or you’ve simply had enough of rising fees, you have three sensible paths.
Option 1 — Renew and stay put
If payroll is running smoothly and the cost still works for your headcount, renewing is the lowest-effort choice. Just confirm your version is within its support window so direct deposit and tax tables keep flowing.
Option 2 — Keep Desktop, change payroll
You can keep your QuickBooks Desktop accounting and move payroll to a separate provider, then import the journal entries. This works well if Intuit’s per-employee fees have outgrown the value you get. A no-subscription Desktop license keeps your books local and one-time-cost while you handle payroll elsewhere.
Option 3 — Move payroll online
QuickBooks Online Payroll is Intuit’s forward path and includes automated tax filing in its higher tiers. It’s a fit if you also want cloud access and remote bookkeeping. Weigh the ongoing monthly cost against the convenience.
Our team can point you to the right edition and handle setup. Genuine licenses, instant delivery, activation guaranteed.
Explore QuickBooks Desktop Options →Making the right call for your business
QuickBooks Desktop Payroll still does its job well for businesses that want payroll calculations and tax forms handled inside software they already know. The questions worth answering before you renew are simple: does the total cost (base plus per-employee) still make sense for your headcount, and is your version still supported?
If both answers are yes, keep going. If the cost has crept past what feels fair, that’s your signal to compare a no-subscription Desktop setup or a different payroll provider. Either way, you now know what you’re paying for and what your alternatives are — which is exactly the position you want to be in before a renewal notice lands.
