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    Free Airbnb Expense Tracker Template (Excel & Google Sheets) for Hosts

    R
    ReceiptSync TeamJune 20·2 min read·Updated Jun 20, 2026

    Running one Airbnb is a side business; running three is a real one — and the difference at tax time is whether your expenses are organized per property. This free Airbnb expense tracker template (works in Excel and Google Sheets) gives hosts a clean structure for income, costs, and the allocations that drive your deductions.

    Go deeper: see the best receipt tracking apps for Airbnb hosts and the guide for landlords and real estate investors, plus our small business expense spreadsheet template.

    What's in the template

    • Per-property tabs: one sheet per listing so income and expenses never get mixed up.
    • Income vs. expense by listing: nightly revenue minus costs, per property and combined.
    • Platform & cleaning fees: dedicated rows for host service fees and turnover cleaning — easy to forget, fully deductible.
    • Mortgage-interest & property-tax allocation: a simple business-use-percentage column so you only deduct the rented share.

    Schedule E vs. Schedule C (a quick note)

    Most hosts who simply rent space report rental income on Schedule E; hosts providing substantial hotel-like services may file Schedule C. The categories overlap, so this template is built to feed either — but confirm your filing with a tax professional. If you do file Schedule C, our Schedule C category checker helps you sort each expense.

    Fill it automatically by scanning receipts

    A spreadsheet is only as good as the receipts behind it. With ReceiptSync, photograph each expense — cleaning supplies, a plumber, new linens — and it extracts the date, amount, and merchant and syncs straight to Google Sheets or Excel, tagged so you can split it by property. Download the free expense tracker template to start, or explore all our free host and tax tools.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should an Airbnb expense tracker include?

    Track income and expenses per property: cleaning, supplies, repairs, utilities, platform/host service fees, insurance, and the business-use share of mortgage interest, property tax, and depreciation. Per-property tabs keep multiple listings separate.

    Do Airbnb hosts file Schedule C or Schedule E?

    It depends. Most hosts who rent without providing substantial services report on Schedule E; those who provide hotel-like services (regular cleaning, meals, concierge) may use Schedule C. Check with a tax pro for your situation.

    How do I track receipts for my Airbnb?

    Capture each receipt as you spend — cleaning supplies, repairs, furnishings — and tag it to the property. A receipt scanner that exports to your spreadsheet keeps every deduction documented and audit-ready.

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    Searching for a budgeting app with receipt scanning usually means one of two things: you're tired of typing cash and paper receipts into your budget by hand, or you're self-employed and need receipt images plus tax categories your budgeting app doesn't provide. This 2026 guide compares the five most popular budgeting apps on the three things that actually matter for receipts — scanning, cash, and Schedule C — and shows where a dedicated receipt layer fits. Go deeper: see our hands-on guides for scanning receipts into YNAB, the Copilot Money Android alternative, and whether Rocket Money or PocketGuard scan receipts — plus the Schedule C categories guide and how to build a budget from your receipts. The comparison: receipts, cash, and Schedule C AppScans receipts?Handles cash?Schedule C / business? YNABNoManual entry onlyNo native support Monarch MoneyYes (native)Manual / from a photoYes — but gated behind Plus (~$199/yr) Rocket MoneyNoWeak (bank-sync first)No PocketGuardPhoto attach only (no data extraction)Manual entry onlyNo Copilot MoneyNoManual entry onlyNo (iOS/Mac/Web, no Android) ReceiptSyncYes — extracts merchant, date, amountYes — photo any receiptYes — maps to Schedule C, exports to Sheets/Excel Why bank-sync budgeting apps miss receipts YNAB, Rocket Money, PocketGuard, and Copilot are excellent at one job: importing and categorizing bank and card transactions. But that model has three blind spots for the self-employed: Cash and paper: anything you pay in cash never hits a linked account, so it's invisible unless you type it in. Receipt images: the IRS wants documentation, and a bank line ("AMZN $48.10") isn't a receipt. None of these four store the actual receipt image as a tax record. Business categories: their categories are personal-finance buckets (Groceries, Dining), not the Schedule C lines a sole proprietor files on. What about Monarch Money? Monarch is the exception worth calling out honestly: it now has native receipt scanning that pulls merchant, amount, and line items, and it added a Schedule C business product. The catch is price — the business features sit behind Monarch's higher Plus tier (around $199/year), and Monarch is still a bank-sync-first budgeting suite rather than a receipt-first tool. For a cash-heavy gig worker who mostly needs scan → category → spreadsheet, that's a lot of app (and cost) for the receipt layer. The fix: keep your budget, add a receipt layer You don't have to abandon YNAB or Copilot. The cleanest setup for freelancers in 2026 is a budgeting app for planning + a receipt scanner for documentation. With ReceiptSync, you photograph any receipt — card, cash, or paper — and it extracts the date, amount, and merchant, maps it to a Schedule C category, and syncs to Google Sheets or Excel. Your budgeting app keeps doing the budgeting; your receipts become an organized, audit-ready record. Try our free expense tools or download the free expense tracker template to see the workflow, and if you want help choosing software start with the best receipt scanner app for the self-employed.

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    YNAB doesn't scan receipts — there's no built-in scanner, and it can't read the amount off a photo or detect cash you spend. But you can still get every receipt into your YNAB workflow with a simple two-tool setup. Here's how to scan receipts into YNAB in 2026, including the cash and paper receipts YNAB can't see. Go deeper: if you freelance, read YNAB for freelancers for the Schedule C side, and see how to scan receipts to Google Sheets and to Excel automatically. Why YNAB needs a receipt layer YNAB's model is to assign every dollar a job from your linked accounts. That's great for budgeting, but it means two things slip through: receipt images (your record is a transaction line, not the receipt) and cash (anything not on a linked account is invisible until you type it in). For documentation and for cash-heavy spending, you need a scanner feeding YNAB. Step-by-step: scanning receipts into YNAB 1. Capture at the source. Photograph each receipt — card, cash, or paper — as soon as you get it, using a scanning app that extracts merchant, date, and amount. 2. Let it read the data. A good scanner pulls the fields automatically so you're not retyping totals. 3. Reconcile in YNAB. For card spending, match the scanned receipt to the transaction YNAB imported. For cash, add the transaction in YNAB from the scanned amount so your budget reflects it. 4. Keep the image + export. Store the receipt image and export to a spreadsheet so you have documentation YNAB doesn't retain. Do it with ReceiptSync ReceiptSync is built for exactly this: scan any receipt, it extracts the details, keeps the image, and syncs to Google Sheets or Excel — which you can reconcile against YNAB and reuse at tax time. It also captures the cash and paper receipts YNAB can't. Try our free tools or download the free expense tracker template to start.

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    Free Trucking Spreadsheet Templates + Trucker Tax Deduction Worksheet (2026)

    For an owner-operator, the difference between a good year and a great one is often just capturing every deduction. These free trucking spreadsheet templates — plus a trucker tax deduction worksheet — give you a simple system to track fuel, maintenance, and per diem, and to roll it all up for Schedule C. Go deeper: see the best expense trackers for truckers and owner-operators, the vehicle deduction: mileage vs. actual breakdown, and the complete Schedule C categories guide. The trucking expense spreadsheet Revenue per load: broker, lane, rate, and date so you can see your true per-mile income. Fuel by state: a column for the state of purchase makes IFTA reporting painless. Maintenance & repairs: tires, oil, parts, shop labor. Tolls, scales, permits, insurance, and truck/lease payments: the recurring costs that add up fast. Per diem days: count nights away from home for the meal allowance. Trucker tax deduction worksheet (Schedule C) Use this as a fillable checklist so nothing gets missed: Fuel and DEF Repairs, maintenance, and tires Insurance (truck, cargo, liability) Permits, licenses, and IFTA Tolls and scale fees Truck depreciation or lease payments Per diem meal allowance for nights on the road Phone, ELD subscription, and load-board fees For your vehicle costs, remember you generally choose between the standard mileage method and actual expenses — the free mileage reimbursement calculator helps you total miles, and the IRS publishes the current per-mile rate on its standard mileage rates page. Capture every receipt with ReceiptSync The worksheet only works if the receipts are there. ReceiptSync lets you scan a fuel, repair, or scale receipt from the cab, extracts the details, maps it to a Schedule C category, and syncs to Google Sheets or Excel. Estimate your taxes with the 1099 quarterly tax estimator, sort costs with the Schedule C category checker, or download the free expense tracker template.

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