Anaplan Finance applications bring agility and accuracy to financial planning, budgeting, and reporting.
By unifying forecasts, consolidations, and disclosures in a single platform, finance teams can align with business partners and quickly adapt to change.
These solutions help organizations move beyond static spreadsheets, enabling real-time scenario modeling, improved transparency, and smarter decision-making across the enterprise.
Anaplan builds the following applications for Finance:
- Integrated Financial Planning – Streamlines planning, budgeting, and forecasting with collaborative, real-time capabilities.
- Financial Consolidation – Supports efficient accounting processes, transparency, and auditability.
- Disclosure Management – Automates production and distribution of board books, annual reports, and regulatory filings.
- Consensus Margin Planning - Aligns demand and financial plans to forecast revenue, cost, and margins.
- Profitability Analysis - Analyzes and optimizes profitability across customers, products, channels, and regions.
- Project Cost Planning - Manage project financials by importing data, analyzing labor, and forecasting.
- Subscriptions Revenue Planning - Unifies SaaS finance and sales to optimize and forecast revenue.
Pricing considerations
Anaplan Applications for Finance are priced based on the annual revenue of the relevant business entity. The applicable price is determined by:
- The type of application purchased, and
- The revenue tier corresponding to the relevant business entity.
A relevant business entity refers to the legal entity that is directly subscribing to, and deriving benefit from, the Anaplan Application. For example, in cases where an enterprise comprises multiple legal entities, pricing may be based solely on the revenue of the entity that is procuring and using the application, rather than the consolidated revenue of the broader corporate group.
Anaplan reserves the right to audit the subscribing business entity's reported revenue and to adjust the Fees at any time if it determines that there has been a material deviation from the revenue metrics used to establish pricing.