Some parts of advisor technology get more attention than others.
CRM tends to sit closer to relationships. Planning often feels more visible in the client conversation. Trading gets attention because it directly affects execution. AI is generating plenty of headlines because it promises speed, intelligence, and a new level of efficiency.
Portfolio accounting usually isn’t the category that gets the most excitement.
But it may be one of the most important.
Because for many firms, portfolio accounting sits closer than almost anything else to the operational truth of the business. It shapes reporting, billing, reconciliation, daily visibility, and confidence in the data flowing through the firm. And when those functions are strong, a lot of other workflows get easier. When they aren’t, teams often end up compensating in ways that are easy to normalize and hard to scale.
That’s why portfolio accounting deserves more attention in 2026, especially from firms evaluating how to reduce friction, improve data confidence, and create more usable capacity across the business.
Portfolio Accounting Touches More Than Many Realize
It’s easy to think of portfolio accounting as a back-office system.
In reality, it influences far more than reporting alone.
It affects how consistently teams can access and trust portfolio data. It influences how billing logic gets applied and validated. It shapes reconciliation workflows, exception handling, and day-to-day confidence in the numbers the firm relies on. It supports how advisors prepare for conversations, how operations teams keep information moving, and how leaders interpret what’s happening across the business.
In other words, portfolio accounting doesn’t just support a function. It supports the flow of work.
That matters because most firms don’t feel the cost of a weak operational foundation all at once. They feel it in repeated small moments — a report that takes too long to verify, a workflow that depends too heavily on manual checks, a handoff that gets slower as complexity rises, a process that works but not cleanly enough to scale with confidence.
This is one reason portfolio accounting matters so much in a broader wealthtech conversation. If the system sitting this close to the operational core of the business is creating drag, the effects tend to spread.
The Market Continues To Place Real Weight on this Category
The 2026 T3 Software Survey reinforces just how central this layer remains.
Portfolio management and reporting reached 74.40% market penetration, making it one of the most widely used technology categories in advisor tech. Orion led the category with 18.62% market share, and the report notes that Orion “seems to have pulled away from the pack as the market share leader.”1
That tells us two useful things.
First, portfolio management and reporting continues to sit at the core of how firms operate. This isn’t a peripheral software category. It’s foundational.
Second, firms still place meaningful trust in platforms that can support that function well. In a market full of point solutions and category claims, leadership in portfolio accounting says something important about relevance, depth, and operational fit.
It’s also notable that T3 found Orion’s popularity in this category grows as advisory firms get bigger, which the report attributes to Orion’s expansive feature set. That matters for firms evaluating technology not just for today’s needs, but for the next stage of complexity.