Local business software: NarBiz as an alternative to foreign tools
Why more and more local companies choose business software in their own language instead of stitching together foreign tools — VAT, SEF, fiscalization and live support in one place, connected, with no retyping.
Many small companies today stitch their operation together from five or six foreign tools: one for invoices, another for tasks, a third for documents. Each is in English, none knows VAT, SEF or fiscalization, and none talks to the others. Local business software solves exactly that — everything in your language, by local rules, and connected.
Why local instead of stitching foreign tools
- Everything in your language — the tool and the support, from the people who built it
- Local rules are built in: VAT, SEF, fiscalization, retention periods
- One account for several tools — data is shared, you do not type it twice
- No retyping from program to program
- A self-hosting option — your data can stay with you
- A fair price for small business, with no enterprise line items
Foreign tools, or NarBiz
| Criterion | Stitched foreign tools | NarBiz |
|---|---|---|
| Local language | ✗ | ✓ |
| VAT, SEF, fiscalization | ✗ | ✓ |
| Everything connected (1 account) | ✗ | ✓ |
| Live local support | ✗ | ✓ |
| Self-hosting option | rarely | ✓ |
NarBiz is a family of six local tools — Fascikla (documents), Spisak (tasks), Tefter (CRM), Magaza (ERP), Tabak (print shops) and Tezga eKasa (POS). Use them separately or together, with one account; what you enter in one, the others already know. See all tools.
Key takeaways
- Stitching foreign tools means five English programs that do not know local rules
- Local software has VAT, SEF and fiscalization built in, in your language
- NarBiz: six connected tools, one account, live support, a self-hosting option
Frequently asked questions
Because local rules (VAT, SEF, fiscalization) are built in, everything is in your language with live support, and the tools are connected so you do not retype data.
Yes — each works on its own, and you add the others later when you need them, under the same account.
Yes — there is a self-hosting option, so data does not have to live in someone else cloud.
Read more
e-Invoicing in Serbia 2026: who must comply, deadlines, and how → The KPO book for flat-rate entrepreneurs: what it is, the 6M limit, how to keep it → Fiscalization for freelancers and service businesses: what you actually need →Try Fascikla free
Invoices, contracts and paperwork in one place — OCR reads and sorts them for your accountant.