YNAB is one of the best budgeting tools around — but it was built for personal money, not self-employment. If you freelance, you've probably noticed it has no business or Schedule C categories, can't scan receipts, and can't see cash. Here's how to make YNAB work for business expenses in 2026 without losing your deductions.
Go deeper: learn how to scan receipts into YNAB, review the Schedule C categories guide, and plan ahead with our quarterly estimated taxes guide.
Where YNAB falls short for the self-employed
- No Schedule C: you can create custom categories, but nothing maps them to the IRS lines you actually file.
- No receipt capture: YNAB stores transactions, not receipt images — so your documentation lives somewhere else.
- No cash auto-detection: every cash expense is a manual entry, which is exactly where freelancers lose deductions.
A workflow that keeps your deductions
The trick is to let YNAB do budgeting while a dedicated tool handles business documentation:
- Use YNAB to assign every dollar and stay on budget, including a category for taxes and one for business spending.
- Capture each business receipt — card, cash, or paper — with a scanner the moment you get it.
- Map it to a Schedule C category and export to a spreadsheet, so filing is a copy-paste, not an archaeology dig.
How ReceiptSync fits
ReceiptSync is the receipt-and-tax layer YNAB lacks: scan any receipt, it extracts merchant, date, and amount, assigns a Schedule C category, and syncs to Google Sheets or Excel. You keep YNAB for the budget and gain an audit-ready deduction record. Start with the free Schedule C category checker, estimate what you owe with the 1099 quarterly tax estimator, or download the free expense tracker template.