{"id":2376,"date":"2026-05-06T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-05-06T10:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/?p=2376"},"modified":"2026-05-14T15:33:09","modified_gmt":"2026-05-14T15:33:09","slug":"sage-to-zoho-books-migration","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/sage-to-zoho-books-migration\/","title":{"rendered":"Sage to Zoho Books Migration: Move Accounts Without Losing Data"},"content":{"rendered":"<style>\n.aax-post{font-family:'Poppins',sans-serif;color:#1a2332;max-width:820px;margin:0 auto;line-height:1.75}\n.aax-post h2{font-size:1.55rem;font-weight:600;margin:2.5rem 0 .9rem;color:#0a1628}\n.aax-post h3{font-size:1.15rem;font-weight:600;margin:1.8rem 0 .6rem;color:#1a2332}\n.aax-post p{margin:0 0 1.1rem}\n.aax-post ul,.aax-post ol{margin:0 0 1.1rem;padding-left:1.5rem}\n.aax-post li{margin-bottom:.45rem}\n.aax-post table{width:100%;border-collapse:collapse;margin:1.5rem 0;font-size:.93rem}\n.aax-post th{background:#0a1628;color:#fff;padding:.6rem 1rem;text-align:left}\n.aax-post td{padding:.55rem 1rem;border-bottom:1px solid #e8edf4}\n.aax-post tr:nth-child(even) td{background:#f5f7fb}\n.aax-post .faq-section{background:#f5f7fb;border-radius:10px;padding:1.8rem 2rem;margin:2.5rem 0}\n.aax-post .faq-item{margin-bottom:1.2rem;border-bottom:1px solid #e0e6ef;padding-bottom:1.2rem}\n.aax-post .faq-item:last-child{border-bottom:none;margin-bottom:0;padding-bottom:0}\n.aax-post .faq-question{font-weight:600;color:#0a1628;margin-bottom:.5rem}\n.aax-post .faq-answer{color:#3a4a5c;line-height:1.65}\n.aax-post .aax-cta{background:linear-gradient(135deg,#0a1628 0%,#1a3a5c 100%);border-radius:12px;padding:1.8rem 2rem;margin:2.5rem 0;text-align:center}\n.aax-post .aax-cta p{color:#e8edf4;margin:0 0 1.2rem;font-size:1.05rem}\n.aax-post .aax-cta a{display:inline-block;background:#fff;color:#0a1628;font-weight:600;padding:.65rem 1.6rem;border-radius:6px;text-decoration:none;font-size:.95rem}\n<\/style>\n<div class=\"sp-toc-wrap\"><nav class=\"sp-blog-toc\" id=\"spBlogToc\" style=\"display:none\">\n  <h4><svg width=\"14\" height=\"14\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"6\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"6\"\/><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"12\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"12\"\/><line x1=\"8\" y1=\"18\" x2=\"21\" y2=\"18\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"6\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"6\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"12\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"12\"\/><line x1=\"3\" y1=\"18\" x2=\"3.01\" y2=\"18\"\/><\/svg> On this page<\/h4>\n  <ol class=\"sp-toc-list\" id=\"spTocList\"><\/ol>\n<\/nav><\/div>\n<div class=\"aax-post\">\n\n<p>Completing a sage to zoho books migration without losing historical data is one of the more technically demanding switches a finance team can make. Sage products, whether Sage 50, Sage One, or Sage Business Cloud Accounting, store data in formats that do not map directly to Zoho Books structures. Chart of accounts numbering differs, tax codes carry different labels, and supplier and customer records need reshaping before they can be imported. Get any of these steps wrong and you end up with mismatched opening balances, duplicate contacts, or tax reports that will not reconcile.<\/p>\n\n<p>This guide covers the full process: what data you can move, how to export and prepare it from Sage, how to import it into Zoho Books, and how to verify everything before you close the old system. The approach applies whether you are running Sage 50 on a local desktop in the UK, Sage Business Cloud in the US, or Sage One in any other market.<\/p>\n\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/inline_sage-to-zoho-books-migration_1.jpg\" alt=\"Close-up of tax documents and calculator on wooden table, highlighting financial analysis.\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure>\n<h2>Why Businesses Switch from Sage to Zoho Books<\/h2>\n\n<p>The decision to move usually comes down to one of three factors: cost, accessibility, or workflow integration.<\/p>\n\n<p>Sage 50 desktop licences, particularly in the UK market, carry annual renewal fees that rise year on year. Sage Business Cloud subscriptions are priced competitively for micro-businesses but become costly as user counts grow. <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/products\/zoho-books\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">Zoho Books accounting platform<\/a> starts at significantly lower per-user pricing and includes features, such as client portals, recurring invoicing, project time tracking, and multi-currency support, that Sage typically gates behind higher-tier plans.<\/p>\n\n<p>The second factor is cloud access. Sage 50 remains largely desktop-bound. Finance teams that need their accountant, an overseas director, or a remote bookkeeper to access the same live data in real time find this a hard constraint. Zoho Books is browser-native, with a full-featured mobile app and no VPN requirement.<\/p>\n\n<p>Third, businesses already using Zoho CRM, Zoho Inventory, or Zoho Expense find that <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/gst-returns-zoho-books-guide\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">Zoho Books<\/a> slots into the same ecosystem with native two-way sync, eliminating manual re-entry of sales orders, purchase invoices, and expense claims.<\/p>\n\n<h2>What Data You Can Migrate from Sage<\/h2>\n\n<p>Before building a migration plan, map what exists in Sage against what Zoho Books accepts. Not every Sage data object has a direct import path.<\/p>\n\n<table>\n  <thead>\n    <tr>\n      <th>Data Object<\/th>\n      <th>Sage Export Format<\/th>\n      <th>Zoho Books Import Method<\/th>\n      <th>Notes<\/th>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/thead>\n  <tbody>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Chart of Accounts<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Reports<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Settings &gt; Chart of Accounts)<\/td>\n      <td>Account codes must be remapped; Sage uses numeric codes, Zoho uses alphanumeric<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Customer contacts<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Customers list<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Contacts module)<\/td>\n      <td>Payment terms, currency, and tax treatment fields need manual mapping<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Supplier contacts<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Suppliers list<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Contacts module, vendor type)<\/td>\n      <td>Same field mapping as customers; import as separate vendor batch<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Products and services<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Products or Price List<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Items module)<\/td>\n      <td>Tax rates need re-selecting in Zoho after import<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Open invoices<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Aged Debtors report<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Invoices module) or manual entry<\/td>\n      <td>Import unpaid invoices only; mark paid invoices in opening balances<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Open purchase orders\/bills<\/td>\n      <td>CSV via Aged Creditors report<\/td>\n      <td>CSV import (Bills module)<\/td>\n      <td>Only outstanding bills; historical paid bills go into opening balances<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Opening balances<\/td>\n      <td>Trial Balance at migration date<\/td>\n      <td>Manual entry (Settings &gt; Opening Balances)<\/td>\n      <td>This is the most critical step; enter at the cut-off date<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Historical transactions<\/td>\n      <td>Not directly importable<\/td>\n      <td>Not supported via standard import<\/td>\n      <td>Keep Sage active (read-only) for historical lookups or export to PDF\/CSV archive<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n\n<p>Historical transactions, meaning posted journal entries, paid invoices, and reconciled bank statements from before the cut-off date, cannot be bulk-imported into Zoho Books. Plan for this by choosing a clean cut-off date (typically a month-end or financial year-end) and entering opening balances to carry forward all accumulated values. Once migrated, <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/zoho-books-bank-reconciliation-india\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">bank reconciliation in Zoho Books<\/a> in Zoho Books works the same way.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Choosing a Cut-Off Date and Migration Strategy<\/h2>\n\n<p>The cut-off date is the single most important planning decision. All transactions posted in Sage up to and including that date are captured in the opening trial balance you enter into Zoho Books. From the day after the cut-off, all new transactions go into Zoho Books.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Common cut-off options<\/h3>\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>Financial year-end:<\/strong> Cleanest option. The trial balance at year-end is already audited or reviewed, making opening balances straightforward to enter and easy to validate against prior returns.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Month-end:<\/strong> Practical if you cannot wait for year-end. Run a month-end close in Sage, export the trial balance, and use it as your Zoho Books opening balance.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Mid-month:<\/strong> Avoid this where possible. Splitting a month between two systems creates reconciliation headaches that will persist through the financial year.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>Once you have the cut-off date, give yourself at least two to three weeks of parallel running time: Sage stays active for reference, Zoho Books goes live for new transactions. This gives you a window to catch discrepancies before fully decommissioning Sage.<\/p>\n\n\n<figure style=\"margin:36px 0;text-align:center;line-height:0;\"><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/04\/inline_sage-to-zoho-books-migration_2.jpg\" alt=\"Woman photographing shoes for online sale in home workspace with laptop and packages.\" style=\"width:100%;max-width:820px;height:auto;border-radius:10px;box-shadow:0 4px 20px rgba(10,22,40,.13);\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/figure>\n<h2>Step-by-Step: Exporting Data from Sage<\/h2>\n\n<p>The exact export paths differ slightly between Sage 50, Sage One, and Sage Business Cloud, but the data objects are the same across all three.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Sage 50 (desktop)<\/h3>\n<ol>\n  <li>Go to <strong>File &gt; Export<\/strong> for customer records, supplier records, and product\/service lists. Sage 50 outputs these as CSV or comma-separated text files.<\/li>\n  <li>For the chart of accounts, run <strong>Reports &gt; Nominal &gt; Nominal Activity<\/strong> and export to CSV. This gives you account codes, names, and balances.<\/li>\n  <li>For open invoices, run <strong>Reports &gt; Customers &gt; Aged Debtors (Detailed)<\/strong> filtered to unpaid invoices only, and export to CSV.<\/li>\n  <li>For the trial balance (opening balances), run <strong>Reports &gt; Financial Statements &gt; Trial Balance<\/strong> as at your cut-off date and export to CSV or PDF.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n<h3>Sage One and Sage Business Cloud Accounting<\/h3>\n<ol>\n  <li>Navigate to <strong>Contacts<\/strong> and use the bulk export option (CSV) for customers and suppliers separately.<\/li>\n  <li>Under <strong>Products and Services<\/strong>, export the full product list to CSV.<\/li>\n  <li>Under <strong>Reporting<\/strong>, export the <strong>Trial Balance<\/strong> as at your cut-off date.<\/li>\n  <li>For open invoices and bills, run the <strong>Aged Debtors<\/strong> and <strong>Aged Creditors<\/strong> reports and export to CSV.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n<h2>Preparing Your Data for Zoho Books Import<\/h2>\n\n<p>Raw Sage exports rarely match Zoho Books import templates exactly. You will need to clean and reformat each file. Download Zoho Books import templates from <strong>Settings &gt; Data Migration<\/strong> and use them as your target format.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Chart of accounts remapping<\/h3>\n<p>Sage uses a numeric nominal code system (e.g. 4000 for Sales, 2100 for Creditors Control). Zoho Books uses account type categories rather than numeric codes as the primary identifier. During import, map each Sage nominal account to the correct Zoho Books account type: Income, Cost of Goods Sold, Direct Costs, Expense, Other Current Asset, Fixed Asset, Current Liability, and so on. Create a mapping spreadsheet before touching any import file.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Contact records<\/h3>\n<p>Zoho Books contact CSV requires: Contact Name, Contact Type (Customer\/Vendor), Currency, Payment Terms, Email. Sage exports typically include billing address, shipping address, and tax registration numbers. Carry these across, but verify field names match the Zoho template exactly. Mismatched headers cause silent import failures where some records load and others silently drop.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Tax rates<\/h3>\n<p>Sage UK uses T0, T1, T9 tax codes. Sage US uses state-level tax groups. Zoho Books uses named tax rates configured in <strong>Settings &gt; Taxes<\/strong>. Before importing any contacts or items, set up your tax rates in Zoho Books first. Then reference the correct Zoho tax name in the import CSV rather than the Sage tax code.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Importing Data into Zoho Books<\/h2>\n\n<p>Import in this sequence to avoid dependency errors:<\/p>\n\n<ol>\n  <li><strong>Chart of accounts<\/strong> \u2014 must exist before any transaction or balance can reference an account.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Tax rates<\/strong> \u2014 set up manually in Settings before importing contacts or items.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Contacts<\/strong> (customers first, then vendors) \u2014 must exist before invoices or bills can reference them.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Items<\/strong> (products and services) \u2014 can be imported in parallel with contacts.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Open invoices<\/strong> \u2014 import only unpaid invoices as at the cut-off date.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Open bills<\/strong> \u2014 import only unpaid vendor bills as at the cut-off date.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Opening balances<\/strong> \u2014 enter manually in Settings &gt; Opening Balances after all contacts and transactions are in place.<\/li>\n<\/ol>\n\n<p>For open invoices and bills, set the invoice date to the original date in Sage. This preserves aging correctly. Do not set all invoices to the migration date, as this distorts your debtors aging report from day one.<\/p>\n\n<p>For those who have <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/migrate-xero-to-zoho-books\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">migrated to Zoho Books from Xero<\/a>, the import sequence is similar, but the Sage chart of accounts remapping step is typically more involved due to the numeric nominal code system.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Entering Opening Balances<\/h2>\n\n<p>This step carries the entire historical financial position of the business into Zoho Books. Errors here will cause the balance sheet to be wrong from day one, and fixing them after the fact requires journal entries that can confuse future reconciliations.<\/p>\n\n<p>In Zoho Books, go to <strong>Settings &gt; Opening Balances<\/strong>. Enter values as at the close of business on your cut-off date. The source is your Sage trial balance exported at that date.<\/p>\n\n<h3>What to enter<\/h3>\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>Bank and cash balances:<\/strong> Enter the closing balance from each bank account in Sage. These will be your starting reconciliation points.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Accounts receivable:<\/strong> If you imported open invoices, Zoho Books calculates the AR balance from those. Do not double-enter it in opening balances.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Accounts payable:<\/strong> Same principle: if you imported open bills, AP is already reflected. Skip it in opening balances.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Fixed assets:<\/strong> Enter the net book value (cost minus accumulated depreciation) for each asset account.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Loans and long-term liabilities:<\/strong> Enter the outstanding principal balance at the cut-off date.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Retained earnings:<\/strong> Zoho Books typically calculates this automatically once all other balances are entered correctly. If the trial balance does not balance (debits equal credits), the difference will show as a suspense entry, which flags a data entry error.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<p>After entering all opening balances, run the <strong>Balance Sheet as at the cut-off date<\/strong> in Zoho Books and compare it line by line to the Sage trial balance. The figures must match exactly before you go live.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Post-Migration Setup and Verification<\/h2>\n\n<p>With data in place, several configuration tasks remain before the system is fully operational.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Bank feeds<\/h3>\n<p>Connect your bank accounts to Zoho Books via the banking module. Most major UK banks (Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds, NatWest) and US banks support direct feed or CSV import. Set the feed start date to the day after your cut-off date so there is no overlap with historical Sage data.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Payment gateways<\/h3>\n<p>If you were using GoCardless, Stripe, or PayPal in Sage, reconnect these in Zoho Books under <strong>Settings &gt; Payment Gateways<\/strong>. Update any invoice payment links sent to customers to use the new Zoho Books payment URL.<\/p>\n\n<h3>User access and roles<\/h3>\n<p>Recreate user accounts for your team in <strong>Settings &gt; Users and Roles<\/strong>. Zoho Books role-based access lets you restrict bookkeepers to transaction entry, give accountants report access, and give directors read-only visibility, without sharing admin credentials.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Recurring transactions<\/h3>\n<p>Any recurring invoices, bills, or journal entries from Sage need to be recreated in Zoho Books. Export a list from Sage before decommissioning it and tick them off one by one as you rebuild them.<\/p>\n\n<p>Once all this is done, reviewing <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/zoho-books-complete-setup-india\/\" class=\"sp-content-link\">setting up Zoho Books<\/a> in full is useful to ensure no configuration step has been missed, particularly around tax settings and automated reminders.<\/p>\n\n<h2>Common Mistakes to Avoid<\/h2>\n\n<ul>\n  <li><strong>Importing paid invoices as open:<\/strong> This inflates accounts receivable immediately and causes the AR balance to disagree with opening balances. Import only genuinely unpaid invoices.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Using the wrong cut-off date for opening balances:<\/strong> The opening balance date and the last Sage transaction date must match exactly. One day off and bank reconciliation will never clear.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Skipping tax rate setup before contact import:<\/strong> If contacts reference a tax code that does not yet exist in Zoho Books, the import may create contacts with blank tax settings, leading to incorrectly zero-rated invoices.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Not archiving Sage data:<\/strong> Keep a full Sage backup and export a CSV archive of all historical transactions. This is your audit trail for any period before the cut-off date. Do not uninstall or cancel Sage until this archive is confirmed and stored securely.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Rushing the balance sheet reconciliation:<\/strong> Skipping the line-by-line comparison between the Sage trial balance and Zoho Books opening balance sheet is the most common cause of month-one reporting failures. Allow a full day for this step.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<div class=\"faq-section\">\n  <h2>Frequently Asked Questions<\/h2>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">Can I import historical transactions from Sage into Zoho Books?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Zoho Books does not support bulk import of historical posted transactions. The standard approach is to choose a cut-off date, export the trial balance from Sage at that date, and enter the figures as opening balances in Zoho Books. All transactions before the cut-off date remain in Sage, which you keep as a read-only archive. New transactions from the cut-off date onwards are entered in Zoho Books.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">How long does a Sage to Zoho Books migration typically take?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">A straightforward migration for a small business with clean Sage data, fewer than 500 contacts, and a clear year-end cut-off date can be completed in one to two weeks. Larger businesses with multiple cost centres, complex tax configurations, or significant open invoice volumes typically need four to six weeks, including two to three weeks of parallel running to verify opening balances and reconcile bank feeds.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">What is the best cut-off date for migrating from Sage to Zoho Books?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Financial year-end is the cleanest option because the trial balance is already closed and often reviewed by an accountant. If you cannot wait for year-end, use a month-end close. Avoid mid-month cut-off dates, as splitting a month between two systems complicates reconciliation and creates gaps in management reporting that can persist for the rest of the financial year.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">Does Zoho Books handle UK VAT and Making Tax Digital after migration from Sage?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Yes. Zoho Books is HMRC-recognised for Making Tax Digital (MTD) for VAT. After migration, configure your VAT registration number and scheme (standard, flat rate, or cash accounting) in Settings, then connect Zoho Books to your HMRC Government Gateway account. VAT returns can be filed directly from Zoho Books without using bridging software. Historic VAT periods before the migration cut-off are handled in Sage as usual.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"faq-item\">\n    <p class=\"faq-question\">Will my accountant be able to access Zoho Books after migration?<\/p>\n    <p class=\"faq-answer\">Yes. Zoho Books has an Accountant role with read and report access. You can invite your accountant as a user at no additional charge on most plans. They can view the chart of accounts, run reports, and post journal entries without seeing payroll data or admin settings. This is one of the practical advantages over Sage 50 desktop, where remote accountant access typically requires a VPN or shared licence.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"aax-cta\">\n  <p>Aaxonix manages Sage to Zoho Books migrations end to end: data mapping, opening balance verification, bank feed setup, and user training. Most migrations go live within three weeks, with zero data loss and a reconciled balance sheet from day one. Book a free consultation and get a no-obligation migration scope and timeline within 48 hours.<\/p>\n  <a href=\"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/contact\/\">Book a free consultation<\/a>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>A sage to zoho books migration succeeds or fails on the quality of preparation: clean data exports, an accurate trial balance, and a systematic import sequence. Take the time to map your chart of accounts before touching any import file, validate the opening balance sheet before going live, and keep Sage available for historical lookups for at least six months after cut-off. With these steps in place, the transition from Sage to Zoho Books can be completed without losing any financial data or disrupting your reporting cycle.<\/p>\n\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Step-by-step guide to migrating from Sage 50, Sage One, or Sage Business Cloud to Zoho Books. Data mapping, opening balances, and import sequence explained.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2373,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[647,509,649,646,648],"class_list":["post-2376","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-blog","tag-accounting-migration","tag-cloud-accounting","tag-sage-migration","tag-sage-to-zoho-books","tag-zoho-books-migration"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2376","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=2376"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2376\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":3662,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2376\/revisions\/3662"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/2373"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=2376"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=2376"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/aaxonix.com\/resources\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=2376"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}