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.