2026 / March
That month’s purchases — Therapy equipment & modalities, Splinting & orthotic materials, and Adaptive & assistive devices — each recorded with its date, vendor, amount, and receipt.
expense & receipt organization
Business expenses and their receipts are scattered across email, card statements, and a drawer, so nothing is grouped, dated, or ready when it is needed. For occupational therapists, that means Therapy equipment & modalities, Splinting & orthotic materials, and Adaptive & assistive devices all sitting in different places. Cash Workspace gives you one place to record each item, attach its file, and keep it where you can find it. It is free.
The problem
Business expenses and their receipts are scattered across email, card statements, and a drawer, so nothing is grouped, dated, or ready when it is needed.
The workflow
A simple, repeatable way to expense and receipt records without special software.
Pull each purchase — Therapy equipment & modalities, Splinting & orthotic materials, and Adaptive & assistive devices — out of email, card statements, and paper into a single running list so nothing sits unrecorded.
For every purchase, note the date, vendor, amount, and which category it belongs to, then attach the receipt to that record.
Sort the records into the categories that match how occupational therapists actually spends, and keep each month in its own place.
Once a month, scan for a missing receipt, a purchase logged twice, or an amount that looks off, and fix it while you still remember the context.
Record structure
The fields that make a expense and receipt record complete and findable.
Example setup
One way occupational therapists can lay this out in Cash Workspace.
That month’s purchases — Therapy equipment & modalities, Splinting & orthotic materials, and Adaptive & assistive devices — each recorded with its date, vendor, amount, and receipt.
A short, consistent set: Therapy equipment & modalities, Splinting & orthotic materials, Adaptive & assistive devices, Sensory-integration supplies, Standardized assessment kits, and Professional liability insurance.
Each receipt attached to its expense record, so proof and entry live together.
Common mistakes
How it helps
Enter each item once — date, vendor, amount, category — and attach the file to that record. No bank sync, no receipt-reading; the record is deliberate and yours.
The same categories and folders every month, so occupational therapists always know where a record goes and where to find it later.
Expenses group by category and month, so a summary is a matter of reading the folder, not rebuilding it.
Related
The invoice tracking guide for occupational therapists.
The accountant handoff guide for occupational therapists.
A related organization guide.
A related organization guide.
Browse organization guides across every workflow.
FAQ
Cash Workspace helps you keep organized records; it is not tax software and does not provide tax advice. Labels such as “potentially deductible” are organizational only — what actually applies depends on your situation and jurisdiction, so confirm with a qualified tax professional. Organizing your records well simply makes that conversation faster.
Cash Workspace is a free place for occupational therapists to keep records and their files organized. Start a workspace and set it up your way.