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Published on 13 July 20267 minutes

Accounts payable vs expense management: what's the difference? (2026 Malaysia guide)

Cherie Foo
Growth Content Manager

Accounts payable vs expense management: what's the difference? (2026 Malaysia guide)

Key takeaways:

  • Accounts payable (AP) covers vendor-initiated spend: supplier invoices, purchase orders, and bills from external parties.

  • Expense management covers employee-initiated spend: corporate card transactions and out-of-pocket reimbursements.

  • Airwallex handles both in one place: Bill Pay for vendor invoices and Expense Management for employee spend, with a shared approval engine and audit trail covering both.

Accounts payable vs expense management are often treated as the same thing, but they’re not.

Both involve money leaving your business, but they handle fundamentally different types of spend, follow different approval paths, and sit in different places on your books.

This guide explains what each process covers, when to use each one, and what breaks when you get it wrong.

What is accounts payable?

Accounts payable (AP) is the money your business owes to suppliers and vendors for goods or services you have already received but not yet paid for. It sits on your balance sheet as a current liability.

AP is triggered externally. A vendor delivers something, issues an invoice, and your finance team processes and pays it. Common examples include supplier invoices for inventory, contractor fees, utility bills in the company's name, and software subscriptions billed directly to your business.

For a full breakdown of how AP works, see our guide to accounts payable in Malaysia.

What is expense management?

Expense management covers employee-initiated spend: purchases made by your team on behalf of the business. This includes corporate card transactions and out-of-pocket costs that employees submit for reimbursement.

Unlike AP, this process is triggered internally:

  • An employee makes a purchase, captures the receipt, and submits it for approval.

  • Their line manager reviews it, finance reconciles it, and the reimbursement is processed.

Common examples include travel, meals, client entertainment, and SaaS tools bought on a personal or company card.

For a deeper look at how expense management works, see our expense management guide for Malaysian businesses.

AP vs expense management: Key differences at a glance

The two processes share one thing in common: money leaves your business. Everything else is different.

Accounts payable

Expense management

Initiated by

External vendor or supplier

Employee

Triggered by

Supplier invoice

Card transaction or reimbursement claim

Financial record

Current liability on the balance sheet

Typically recorded as an operating expense (or other appropriate account)

Approval flow

AP controller or finance manager

Line manager, then finance

Managed with

Bill payment softwware

Expense management software

The distinction matters because each process has its own approval logic, GL coding rules, and compliance requirements. Running the wrong spend type through the wrong process creates errors that are often only discovered at month-end close.

When to use each: a use-case guide

The rule of thumb is straightforward: if an external party issues a document to your business, it belongs in AP. If an employee makes a purchase on behalf of your business, it belongs in expense management.

Use AP (bill payments) when:

  • A supplier sends an invoice for goods or services delivered

  • A vendor issues a recurring monthly service bill

  • A contractor submits an invoice referencing your purchase order.

  • Your business receives a utility bill, professional services fee, or freight charge

Use expense management when:

  • An employee pays for a client lunch on a corporate card

  • A staff member books a flight and submits a reimbursement claim

  • A team member buys software on a personal card for a business purpose

  • A sales rep incurs accommodation or transport costs while travelling for work

The initiating party is the clearest signal.

With AP, the vendor starts the process by issuing an invoice. With expense management, your employee starts the process by making a purchase. The finance team responds in both cases, but the workflows, approval chains, and GL accounts involved are different.

Where businesses most often get confused is with recurring software subscriptions and contractor payments.

If a SaaS tool is billed directly to your business account with a vendor invoice, it is AP. If an employee puts it on their card, it is an expense. The same product can fall into either category depending on how the purchase was made.

What happens when you mix AP and expense management up

Misrouting spend usually happens when a business has no clear internal framework distinguishing vendor-initiated spend from employee-initiated spend. Here’s what happens when the spend is misrouted:

1. Employee card transactions submitted as AP invoices

When a card transaction gets routed through a bill payment workflow, it creates a mismatch between the card statement and the AP ledger.

The transaction appears in two places, triggers a duplicate payment risk, and can create reconciliation mismatches and increase the risk of duplicate payments.

Approval is also routed to the wrong person: an AP controller rather than the employee's line manager.

2. Vendor invoices processed through expense management

Many supplier invoices require purchase order matching or other AP controls, depending on the business's procurement process. When they are submitted as expense claims instead, those checks are bypassed.

The invoice gets reviewed by a line manager with no visibility into the vendor relationship or payment terms, and payment may go out without the correct authorisation.

3. GL miscoding

When the tool does not match the spend type, the chart of accounts entry is often wrong. Employee travel costs land in accounts payable. Vendor invoices get coded as staff expenses.

Over time, this distorts cost-centre reporting, makes budget variance analysis unreliable, and creates extra work when closing the books each month.

All three problems compound each other. The longer the misrouting continues, the harder the reconciliation work at period end.

How a unified platform connects AP and expense management

The underlying problem is not that AP and expense management are complex. It is that most businesses run them in separate tools with separate approval chains, separate audit trails, and no shared view of total outbound spend.

A unified platform solves this by giving both processes a common infrastructure:

One approval engine

With a single approval engine covering both vendor invoices and employee expense claims, you can apply consistent policy rules across all outbound spend.

Vendor invoices route to the AP controller. Employee expenses route to the relevant line manager. Both follow a defined, auditable path.

One audit trail

When AP and expense management share an audit trail, your finance team has one place to check before close. There is no need to reconcile data across two systems or chase approvals in separate tools.

Automated GL coding

A unified platform applies the correct chart of accounts entry based on spend type automatically. Vendor invoices code to the right liability account. Employee expenses code to the right cost centre. This removes the manual step that most often causes miscoding.

Airwallex handles both sides of this in one platform:

Both feed into a shared dashboard with a single approval engine and audit trail.

Bill Pay, Expense Management, and Corporate Cards, all in one place
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Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

What is the difference between accounts payable and expense management?

Accounts payable covers vendor-initiated spend: invoices and bills issued by external suppliers for goods or services delivered to your business. Expense management covers employee-initiated spend: card transactions and out-of-pocket costs your team submits for reimbursement. The key difference is who starts the process. With AP, the vendor does. With expense management, your employee does.

Can employee expenses be processed through accounts payable?

Technically yes, but it creates problems. Employee card transactions routed through AP workflows create reconciliation mismatches, trigger the wrong approval chain, and often result in GL miscoding. Each spend type has its own controls and approval logic, and mixing them undermines both.

What types of spend belong in AP vs expense management?

Supplier invoices, contractor fees, utility bills, and purchase order-backed payments belong in AP. Travel costs, client meals, out-of-pocket purchases, and corporate card transactions belong in expense management. Where businesses get confused is with software subscriptions: if the vendor bills your business directly, it is AP; if an employee puts it on their card, it is an expense.

How does GL miscoding happen when spend is misrouted?

When the wrong tool processes a transaction, the chart of accounts entry is often wrong. Employee expenses end up coded as liabilities. Vendor invoices get recorded as staff costs. Over time this distorts cost-centre reporting and makes month-end close harder. A platform that automatically codes spend based on type removes this risk. Airwallex applies automated GL coding for both vendor invoices and employee expenses within the same platform.

Do I need separate tools for AP and expense management?

Not necessarily. A unified platform can handle both, with separate workflows for each spend type but a shared approval engine and audit trail. This gives your finance team a single view of all outbound spend without the reconciliation work that comes from running two disconnected systems. Airwallex's AP automation and AI expense management guides cover how each side works in more detail.

What is the difference between accounts payable and accrued expenses?

Accounts payable are recorded when your business receives an invoice from a vendor. Accrued expenses are costs you have incurred but not yet been invoiced for, such as wages earned but not yet paid. Both are current liabilities on the balance sheet, but they arise at different points in the accounting cycle.

View this article in another region:Singapore

This publication does not constitute legal, tax, or professional advice from Airwallex nor substitute seeking such advice, and makes no express or implied representations / warranties / guarantees regarding content accuracy, completeness, or currency. This publication is not intended to be relied on for the purpose of making a decision about a financial product and users should verify details independently.

All comparisons and information contained in this publication reflect only Airwallex’s own research using public documentation on the stated dates and have not been independently validated.

Product features, pricing and other details are subject to change. All third-party names, products, and logos are trademarks of their respective owners and are referred to for identification and compatibility purposes only. If you would like to request an update, feel free to contact us at [[email protected]].

Airwallex (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd., a company incorporated under the laws of Malaysia with company registration number 201801007747 (1269761-X), is regulated as a licensed remittance business under the Money Services Business Act 2011 (Licence number 00743 with an expiry date of 3 August 2028, an E-Money Issuer and a registered merchant acquirer under the Financial Services Act 2013.)

Cherie Foo
Growth Content Manager

Cherie is a Growth Content Manager at Airwallex, where she develops content for businesses in Singapore and across Southeast Asia. She focuses on turning complex topics like cross-border payments, business accounts, and spend management into clear, practical guides that help founders and finance teams make confident decisions.

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