Compare Multi-country vs single-country

One platform across borders, or one POS per country?

Restaurant groups that expand into a second country face a choice: bring their existing single-country POS and re-deploy it locally, or move to a multi-country platform that resolves fiscal rules per branch. Both work; the trade-off is between integration depth in one market and operational simplicity across many.

A

Multi-country fiscal SaaS

One platform, one panel, country-specific behaviour (BE FDM, DE TSE, FR NF525, IT RT, TR ÖKC, NL Peppol, ES VeriFactu / TicketBAI) handled via per-country adapters and profiles.

  • Cross-border ops in one panel — compare Brussels and Istanbul side by side
  • New country goes live in days, not quarters — switch the profile, pair the device
  • Single audit log across all markets — one report for group-level compliance
  • Menu, staff and price lists clone across countries with VAT classes re-resolved automatically
  • Per-country teams aren't blocked on platform changes — adapters are isolated
  • The trade-off: depth in a single market caps at "what the adapter exposes"
B

Single-country POS per market

Pick the strongest local POS in each market. Each one is deeply integrated with its country's fiscal authorities and payment processors.

  • Deepest possible local features — fiscal nuance, niche local integrations
  • Often a lower price tag per market (smaller-market POSs are cheaper)
  • Local vendor support — same language, same time zone, often same payment terms
  • No risk of cross-market platform decisions affecting your one market
  • The trade-off: 2 countries means 2 platforms, 2 audit logs, 2 integration backlogs

When each makes sense

Pick option A when

Pick a multi-country platform when you already operate in two or more countries, or when the next 12–18 months put a second-country opening on the roadmap. The operational savings on consolidation (single contract, single integration backlog, comparable KPIs across markets) usually outweigh the depth gap in any single market.

Pick option B when

Pick a single-country POS when you have no concrete plans to expand beyond your home market, when the deepest local feature (a specific fiscal regime detail, a particular voucher provider, a specialised local payment method) is part of your core operation, or when local pricing is a hard constraint.

Frequently asked

Does a multi-country platform mean the same VAT rules everywhere?

No — every multi-country platform worth its salt resolves VAT, fiscal-device requirements, invoice numbering and e-invoicing format per country. The platform is uniform; the behaviour switches per branch based on the country profile. If a platform claims "one VAT engine for everyone" it is hiding regional complexity, not solving it.

What if I'm in one country today but might expand tomorrow?

Pick a multi-country platform if expansion is on a defined roadmap (next 12–18 months). If expansion is hypothetical ("maybe one day"), a strong single-country POS plus a clean data export path is the safer call — you can migrate to a multi-country platform when expansion becomes concrete.

How do staff and menus move between countries on a multi-country platform?

Menus clone with tax classes that re-resolve per country (a 21% VAT class in BE becomes 19% in DE). Staff cloning is more nuanced — Belgian Dimona, French DSN, Turkish SGK each have their own filing rules — but the contracts, shift patterns and pay-rate structure are reusable. The country adapter is what determines what carries over and what is rewritten.