Here's what we see in every Philippine business that calls us for help: customer data lives in an Excel file on someone's desktop. Inventory is tracked in a Google Sheet that three people edit simultaneously (and break weekly). Employee records are in a different Excel file that HR guards like a national secret.
The problem isn't the data — it's the container. Spreadsheets were designed for calculations, not for managing business processes. When you try to use Excel as a database, you get:
Your customer list can't automatically connect to their orders, which can't connect to inventory levels. Every connection requires manual VLOOKUP formulas that break when rows move.
Everyone sees everything or nothing. You can't give the sales team access to customer data while hiding salary information. Password-protecting sheets is security theater.
Data sits in cells. It doesn't trigger notifications, route approvals, update related records, or enforce business rules. Someone has to manually check and act on every change.
Who changed that price? When was this record last updated? Was this approved? In Excel, you'll never know — there's no history, no logging, no accountability.
For a practical guide on making the switch, see how to replace Excel in your Philippine business.
| Platform | Type | Price (PHP/user/mo) | Record Limits | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Microsoft Access | Desktop database | ~₱900 (M365) | 2GB file size | Single-user, local data |
| Airtable | Cloud spreadsheet-DB | ~₱1,140 ($20) | 50K/base (Pro) | Small teams, simple data |
| Notion | Docs + databases | ~₱570 ($10) | No hard limit | Knowledge management |
| Google AppSheet | No-code on Sheets | ~₱570 ($10) | Sheets-based | Google ecosystem |
| Kintone | Business app platform | from ₱1,000 | Unlimited | PH businesses needing workflows + data |
Access is powerful for single-user desktop databases but shows its age in 2026. No real-time collaboration, no mobile access, no cloud by default. If your IT person who built the Access database leaves, good luck maintaining it. We see this scenario constantly in Philippine businesses.
Airtable makes databases feel like spreadsheets — colorful, visual, and approachable. Great for small teams tracking projects or content. The hard limit is scale: 50,000 records per base on Pro plan, and no real approval workflows. Philippine businesses with growing data needs hit ceilings fast. See our detailed Airtable comparison.
Notion databases are lightweight and integrated with docs and wikis. Excellent for knowledge management and internal documentation. But Notion databases aren't real databases — no relational integrity, no computed fields, no workflow triggers. It's a doc tool with database-like features, not a database with doc features. See Kintone vs Notion.
Kintone approaches data differently. Instead of giving you a database that you configure, it gives you a platform to build complete business applications — where the database is just one layer underneath forms, workflows, dashboards, and access controls. Your data isn't just stored; it drives your business processes.
Answer these questions to find your fit:
Notion's free plan and Google Sheets are both free and functional for very small teams. For proper database features, Airtable's free plan (1,000 records) and Kintone's 30-day trial are good starting points.
Yes — and it adds cloud access, mobile apps, collaboration, and workflow automation that Access lacks. Many Philippine businesses migrating from Access find Kintone handles everything Access did plus significantly more.
Not with modern no-code platforms. Kintone, Airtable, and Notion all let non-technical users build and modify databases through drag-and-drop interfaces. Kintone additionally supports JavaScript customization when you need advanced features.
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