expense & receipt organization

Expense and receipt organization for video editors

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 video editors, that means Editing software & subscriptions, Plugins & effects packs, and Stock footage & music licensing 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

Why video editors lose track

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.

  • Buying stock footage and plugins without tagging them to the client edit, so per-project costs are impossible to reconstruct.
  • Filing subscription invoices in email instead of with the finance records, so recurring software charges go unreviewed.
  • Losing track of which stock and music licenses belong to which delivered project.

The workflow

How video editors keep it organized

A simple, repeatable way to expense and receipt records without special software.

  1. 1

    Gather every expense into one place

    Pull each purchase — Editing software & subscriptions, Plugins & effects packs, and Stock footage & music licensing — out of email, card statements, and paper into a single running list so nothing sits unrecorded.

  2. 2

    Record each expense with its details

    For every purchase, note the date, vendor, amount, and which category it belongs to, then attach the receipt to that record.

  3. 3

    Group by category and month

    Sort the records into the categories that match how video editors actually spends, and keep each month in its own place.

  4. 4

    Review before you hand anything off

    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

What each record holds

The fields that make a expense and receipt record complete and findable.

Date
When the purchase happened — the anchor for grouping by month and period.
Vendor
Who you paid, so similar purchases sort together.
Amount
What it cost, recorded exactly as on the receipt.
Category
Which expense category it belongs to, chosen from a consistent list.
Receipt
The receipt image or PDF attached to the record so proof and entry live together.
Project / edit
The editing job a record ties to, so assets and subcontractor costs group under one project.
Client
Who commissioned the edit, so a repeat client's jobs stay under one name.
Revision round
Which round a cost or delivery relates to, useful when scope expands over several passes.
License / asset
The stock clip, track, or template a cost covers, kept with the record so proof of license stays attached.

Example setup

An example structure

One way video editors can lay this out in Cash Workspace.

2026 / March

That month’s purchases — Editing software & subscriptions, Plugins & effects packs, and Stock footage & music licensing — each recorded with its date, vendor, amount, and receipt.

Categories

A short, consistent set: Editing software & subscriptions, Plugins & effects packs, Stock footage & music licensing, Storage & backup drives, Reference monitor & calibration, and Motion-graphics templates.

Receipts

Each receipt attached to its expense record, so proof and entry live together.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Buying stock footage and plugins without tagging them to the client edit, so per-project costs are impossible to reconstruct.
  • Filing subscription invoices in email instead of with the finance records, so recurring software charges go unreviewed.
  • Losing track of which stock and music licenses belong to which delivered project.
  • Mixing one-off asset purchases with ongoing subscriptions in the same category.
  • Not recording freelance colorist or sound-subcontractor payments against the project they supported.
  • Letting receipts pile up until the vendor and purpose are forgotten.

How it helps

How Cash Workspace helps

Record it, don’t re-key it

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.

One consistent structure

The same categories and folders every month, so video editors always know where a record goes and where to find it later.

Grouped and ready

Expenses group by category and month, so a summary is a matter of reading the folder, not rebuilding it.

FAQ

Questions people ask

Does Cash Workspace read receipts automatically?
No. Cash Workspace does not use OCR or AI to read receipts. You enter each expense’s date, vendor, amount, and category, then attach the receipt image or PDF to that record so the entry and its proof stay together.
What if I lose a receipt?
Record the expense from your card or bank statement with the date, vendor, and amount, and add a short note that the receipt is missing. The record is still useful, and you can attach the receipt later if it turns up.
How should video editors choose expense categories?
Start from the handful of categories that match how video editors actually spend, and keep the list short and stable. Consistent categories matter more than a long list — you can always split one later if it gets crowded.
Does this replace an accountant?
No. Cash Workspace organizes your records; it does not replace an accountant or give accounting advice. It makes the handoff faster by giving your accountant a complete, labelled set instead of a stream of forwarded files.

A note on tax

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.

Organize your expense and receipt records

Cash Workspace is a free place for video editors to keep records and their files organized. Start a workspace and set it up your way.