Tips & Tricks

    Best Expense Tracker Apps for Plumbers, Electricians & HVAC Contractors in 2026

    R
    ReceiptSync TeamMay 6·13 min read

    The best expense tracker for plumbers, electricians, and HVAC contractors is ReceiptSync — it scans every supply-house receipt, fuel pump slip, and tool purchase in under 5 seconds and syncs the data directly to Google Sheets, giving trades professionals an organized, audit-ready expense log without any manual data entry.

    Why Trades Contractors Lose Thousands on Taxes

    Plumbing, electrical, and HVAC work generates more receipts than almost any other small business. A single service call can produce four receipts: a parts run to the supply house, a fuel stop on the way back, a coffee stop, and a hardware store pickup for the missing fitting. Multiply that by 5–10 jobs a day, and you're looking at 50–80 receipts per week that are all legitimate business deductions.

    The problem is that most trades contractors stuff those receipts into truck consoles, glove boxes, and shirt pockets — and by April, half of them are illegible, lost, or forgotten. The IRS estimates that self-employed trades workers overpay by $5,000–$12,000 per year in taxes simply because their expense documentation is incomplete.

    Common mistakes that cost trades contractors money every year:

    • Cash purchases without records — A $40 cash payment for a roll of copper at a small supply shop becomes invisible without a captured receipt.
    • Mixing personal and business fuel — Without per-trip tracking, you can't accurately split fuel between work trucks and personal driving.
    • Tools written off in the wrong year — A $1,200 pipe threader bought in December gets forgotten until tax prep, when the receipt has already been thrown out.
    • License and continuing-education fees missed — Master plumber renewals, journeyman electrician CE, and EPA 608 recerts are 100% deductible but often paid through personal cards and never tracked.
    • Subcontractor payments without 1099s — Paying a helper $1,500 cash and never issuing a 1099 means losing that deduction at tax time.

    A dedicated expense tracker built for the trades captures every receipt at the moment of purchase — even from a job site, even with greasy hands.

    What Plumbers, Electricians & HVAC Contractors Need in a Tracker

    Trades work is rough, fast, and mobile. Your expense tracker has to keep up. Prioritize these features:

    • Speed in the field — You're between calls. The app needs to capture a receipt in under 10 seconds, even with one hand and a phone in a tool belt.
    • High OCR accuracy on supply-house receipts — Ferguson, Home Depot Pro, Grainger, and Johnstone Supply receipts can be long, dense, and printed on cheap thermal paper. The app must read them reliably.
    • Job and customer tagging — Every expense should be linkable to a specific job so you know your true profit per service call.
    • Mileage tracking integration — A ten-stop service day produces 60–120 deductible miles. The tracker should either capture mileage directly or play nicely with Stride, Everlance, or Hurdlr.
    • Spreadsheet export — Most trades businesses still use Google Sheets or QuickBooks Desktop. Real-time sync to a sheet beats fighting with CSV imports.
    • Truck-mount durability — Apps that crash on weak job-site cell signal are useless. Look for offline scanning that syncs once you're back in coverage.

    The 6 Best Expense Trackers for Plumbers, Electricians & HVAC Contractors

    1. ReceiptSync — Best for Receipt-to-Spreadsheet Tracking

    ReceiptSync is the clear winner for trades contractors who run their books in Google Sheets. Pull up to a Ferguson counter, scan the receipt before you leave the parking lot, and the merchant, date, total, tax, and category land in your spreadsheet before your truck is back on the road. The 99%+ OCR accuracy handles long supply-house receipts (multi-page itemized lists), faded thermal paper from gas stations, and crumpled hardware-store receipts pulled from a cab floor.

    The Google Sheets integration is what makes ReceiptSync genuinely useful for service trades. You can build a job-costing tab where every supply-house receipt links to a specific service call, calculate true profit per job, and identify which customers, neighborhoods, or service categories are actually paying — and which are losing money. Your accountant gets shared view access at year-end and pulls Schedule C numbers in minutes.

    For trades contractors with crews, ReceiptSync's category logic learns your patterns: Ferguson always becomes "Cost of Goods Sold," Shell always becomes "Vehicle Fuel," Lowe's gets split intelligently between "Supplies" and "Cost of Goods Sold." For setup, see our guide on how to scan receipts to Google Sheets.

    • Price: Free (10 scans/month), Pro for unlimited
    • Best for: Solo plumbers, electricians, and HVAC techs running books in Google Sheets
    • Key feature: Real-time receipt scanning to Google Sheets with job tagging
    • Platforms: iOS and Android

    2. QuickBooks Online (Plumber/Contractor Edition) — Best for Crew-Based Operations

    QuickBooks Online with the contractor add-ons is the heavy-duty option for shops with 2–10 trucks. It handles job costing, payroll, 1099 generation for subcontractors, and integrates with most field service management tools (Housecall Pro, ServiceTitan, Jobber). Receipt capture works through the mobile app — solid OCR but slower than ReceiptSync, and the cost adds up.

    • Price: From $35/month (Plus plan recommended)
    • Best for: Trades shops with crews, payroll, and field service software
    • Key feature: Full accounting + 1099 + payroll for trades businesses

    3. ServiceTitan — Best Field Service + Expense Combo

    ServiceTitan is the dominant field service management platform for plumbing, electrical, and HVAC. It handles dispatch, invoicing, customer history, and ties expenses directly to jobs. Receipt scanning is built in. The cost is substantial, but for shops over $500K in annual revenue, the operational lift more than pays for itself.

    • Price: Custom (typically $400–$800/month per tech)
    • Best for: Mid-to-large trades shops needing full field service software
    • Key feature: Job-linked expense tracking inside an end-to-end FSM platform

    4. Hurdlr — Best for Real-Time Tax Liability Tracking

    Hurdlr connects to your bank and credit card accounts and tracks income, expenses, and estimated tax liability in real time. For solo trades contractors who hate quarterly tax surprises, Hurdlr shows you exactly what to set aside as you earn. It also tracks mileage automatically — useful when you're running between 8 service calls a day.

    • Price: Free (basic), Premium from $10/month
    • Best for: Solo contractors who need live quarterly tax estimates
    • Key feature: Live estimated tax liability + automatic mileage tracking

    5. Expensify — Best for Contractors Billing Time and Materials

    Expensify shines if you bill clients on a time-and-materials basis (common for commercial electrical, larger HVAC installs, and remodels). SmartScan captures receipts at 95%+ accuracy, and you can generate clean expense reports to attach to client invoices. Less useful for residential service work where customers don't see line items.

    • Price: From $5/user/month
    • Best for: Commercial trades contractors who bill clients for materials
    • Key feature: Polished expense reports for client billing

    6. Stride — Best Free Tracker for Solo Contractors

    Stride is a 100% free expense and mileage tracker built for self-employed workers. The receipt capture is basic (manual entry with photo attachment), but it's free forever, and the mileage tracking runs automatically in the background. Good fallback for new solo contractors not ready to commit to a paid tool.

    • Price: Free
    • Best for: Brand-new solo contractors on a strict budget
    • Key feature: Free unlimited mileage and expense logging

    Trades Expense Tracker Comparison

    AppReceipt ScanningGoogle Sheets SyncJob CostingPrice
    ReceiptSync99%+ accuracy, <5 secYes (real-time)Via tags/categoriesFree / Pro
    QuickBooks OnlineGood, 95%+NoYes (Plus plan)From $35/mo
    ServiceTitanBuilt-inNoYes (full FSM)From $400/mo
    HurdlrFunctionalNoLimitedFree / $10/mo
    ExpensifySmartScan, 95%+NoVia project tagsFrom $5/mo
    StrideManual + photoNoNoFree

    Schedule C Deductions Checklist for Trades Contractors

    Every trades-specific expense below maps to a Schedule C line and is fully deductible if it's ordinary and necessary for your business:

    • Line 8 — Advertising: Truck wraps, yard signs, Google Local Service Ads, door hangers, t-shirts with company logo
    • Line 9 — Vehicle: Standard mileage (67 cents/mile in 2026) OR actual expenses (gas, insurance, repairs, tires, depreciation). See our Schedule C vehicle deduction guide
    • Line 11 — Contract labor: Helpers, apprentices paid as 1099 subs, drain-cleaning specialists you call for tough jobs
    • Line 13 — Depreciation: Larger tools and equipment (pipe threader, conduit bender, recovery machine) over $2,500 — Section 179 lets you expense these in year one
    • Line 15 — Insurance: General liability, commercial auto, workers' comp, tools/equipment policies
    • Line 17 — Legal and professional services: CPA, business attorney, contract review, estimating software
    • Line 18 — Office expenses: Truck console organizers, invoice books, printer ink, business cards
    • Line 20 — Rent (vehicles, machinery, equipment): Trailer rentals, scaffolding, lift rentals for HVAC rooftop work
    • Line 21 — Repairs and maintenance: Truck repairs (if not using mileage), tool repairs, equipment service
    • Line 22 — Supplies: Consumable items used in jobs (rags, drop cloths, blue tape, plumber's putty, fittings used at customer cost)
    • Line 23 — Taxes and licenses: Master plumber license, journeyman electrician license, EPA 608 cert, city contractor license, vehicle registration (business %)
    • Line 24 — Travel and meals: Out-of-town jobs, training conferences (PHCC, IEC, NATE), 50% of business meals
    • Line 25 — Utilities: Cell phone (business %), shop electric, shop water
    • Line 27 — Other expenses: Software (FieldEdge, Housecall Pro, Jobber), tool replacements, safety equipment, uniforms with logo, dues to PHCC/IEC/NATE, continuing education
    • Cost of Goods Sold (Part III): Materials installed in customer jobs that you bill back — copper, fittings, fixtures, breakers, wire, refrigerant. This is a major category for trades.

    Job-by-Job Profitability: The Real Reason to Track Every Receipt

    Tax savings are only half the win. The other half is knowing which jobs actually make money. Most trades contractors operate on gut feel and discover at year-end that their busiest jobs were also their least profitable.

    When every receipt is captured and tagged to a job, you can answer questions that drive better business decisions:

    • Is service work or new construction more profitable? Service calls have higher hourly rates but more windshield time. Construction has steady hours but tighter margins on materials.
    • Which neighborhoods pay best after drive time? A $400 service call 35 minutes away may net less than a $250 call 8 minutes away.
    • Are you marking up materials enough? If supply-house spend on a job exceeds 30% of revenue, your markup or labor rate is too low.
    • Which customers are profitable? A "loyal" repeat customer who calls for tiny fixes may consume more in fuel and parts than they pay.

    ReceiptSync's job-tag feature makes this analysis automatic — every supply receipt rolls up under the right job, and the spreadsheet tells you the truth about your business.

    The Tool Purchase Question: Section 179 vs Depreciation

    Trades contractors buy expensive equipment. A pipe threader runs $2,500–$4,000. A drain camera is $3,500–$8,000. A vacuum recovery machine is $1,200. Refrigerant recovery, megger testers, conduit benders — every year, you're buying something significant.

    The IRS gives you two ways to deduct these:

    1. Section 179 — Full first-year deduction: Deduct the entire cost in the year purchased, up to $1.16 million (2026 limit). Best when you have strong income that year.
    2. Depreciation (MACRS): Spread the deduction over 5–7 years. Best when you want to smooth deductions across years or current-year income is low.

    For most trades contractors, Section 179 is the right call — but only if you keep the receipt and proof of business use. Save every tool receipt over $500 and have your accountant decide at year-end.

    Mileage: The Deduction Trades Contractors Underclaim

    A typical service plumber drives 25,000–35,000 business miles per year. At the 2026 standard rate of 67 cents per mile, that's a deduction of $16,750–$23,450 — often the single largest line on Schedule C. Yet many trades contractors fail to track mileage because they think it's "extra work."

    The fix is automatic mileage detection. Pair ReceiptSync (for receipts) with Stride, Hurdlr, or Everlance (for mileage). Both tools run in the background and produce IRS-compliant logs. Reconcile once a week — review which trips were business, classify them, done in 2 minutes.

    The Cash Receipt Problem (And How to Solve It)

    Trades work still involves cash. A $30 tip to a parts puller. $50 cash for a quick supply pickup at a small specialty shop. $200 cash to an apprentice for a half-day. Every cash transaction is a deduction, but only if you document it.

    The simple rule: if it leaves your wallet, scan something. If there's no receipt, write the details on a sticky note and scan that — date, vendor, amount, business purpose. The IRS allows reasonable substantiation; what they don't allow is "I think I spent about $X." Treat your scanner like a witness.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I deduct my truck if I use it for both work and personal driving?

    Yes — but only the business-use percentage. If 80% of your miles are work-related, you can deduct 80% of actual vehicle expenses (or use the standard mileage rate on those business miles). The IRS requires a contemporaneous mileage log. See our vehicle deduction guide for the full breakdown.

    Are my work boots, gloves, and uniforms deductible?

    Steel-toed boots and safety gear are deductible if they're required for your work and not suitable for everyday wear. Uniforms with your business logo are deductible. Plain jeans and t-shirts are not deductible, even if you only wear them for work.

    What about my apprentice's wages — do I need to issue a 1099?

    If you pay any individual contractor (not an employee) more than $600 in a calendar year, you must issue a 1099-NEC by January 31. Without the 1099, the IRS can disallow the deduction during an audit. ReceiptSync helps by tracking sub payments through the year so you have totals ready in January.

    Is my master plumber license renewal deductible?

    Yes — license renewals, continuing education hours required to maintain the license, and trade association dues (PHCC, IEC, NATE) are all 100% deductible on Schedule C Line 23 (Taxes and licenses) or Line 27 (Other expenses).

    Can I deduct meals on long service days?

    Lunches you eat alone on a service day are not deductible as business meals. Meals where you're entertaining a customer, meeting with a sub to plan a job, or eating during overnight travel are 50% deductible. The 2018 tax law eliminated the everyday-lunch deduction.

    Other Trades-Adjacent Resources

    For a complete walk-through of every Schedule C line, see our Schedule C expense categories complete guide. If you also operate as a 1099 sub for larger contractors, our best expense trackers for 1099 contractors guide covers strategies for tracking deductions when you wear both hats. And if you're researching tools for materials runs, the Home Depot receipt lookup guide shows how to recover supply-store receipts you've already lost.

    Start Tracking Trades Expenses Today

    Every supply-house receipt you don't capture is profit handed to the IRS. Download ReceiptSync, scan your next Ferguson, Lowe's, or Home Depot Pro receipt, and start a categorized expense log that maps to Schedule C and tells you the truth about your job profitability. For most trades contractors, the difference between an organized expense system and the truck-console pile is $8,000–$15,000 in additional deductions per year — money that belongs in your pocket, not the IRS's.

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