How invoice data entry automation works
Manual invoice data entry means opening a supplier invoice, reading each field, and keying it into your accounting software one value at a time. This tool inverts that. When you upload a supplier invoice PDF, Receipt Caker reads the document in your browser and extracts the fields accounts-payable work depends on: the vendor name, the invoice number, the issue and due dates, each line item with its quantity and unit price, and the subtotal, tax and total. Those values populate an editable form automatically.
Your job shifts from typing to checking. You review the extracted fields against the invoice, correct anything the parser read imperfectly, and then export. Because the extraction is instant and local, processing an invoice becomes a quick confirmation rather than a five-minute transcription — and that saving compounds fast when a bookkeeper handles dozens of supplier invoices a week.
Who eliminates manual invoice entry
Invoice data entry is one of the most repetitive tasks in bookkeeping, so the people who benefit most are the ones drowning in it. Bookkeepers and accounts-payable clerks process supplier invoices for multiple clients or departments and lose hours to retyping. Freelancers and small-business owners who do their own books enter every supplier bill by hand at month-end. Accountants preparing VAT or sales-tax returns need each invoice captured accurately and quickly.
For all of them, the bottleneck is not understanding the invoice — it is the mechanical act of copying it into a system. By extracting the structure of each supplier invoice and presenting it for review, this tool removes the keystrokes while keeping a human in control of accuracy, which is exactly what reliable accounts payable requires.
Export straight into QuickBooks, Xero and spreadsheets
Once the invoice fields are confirmed, you can download a CSV row with a standard header or copy the values to your clipboard as a tab-separated line ready to paste into a spreadsheet. The column order — vendor, invoice number, issue date, due date, currency, subtotal, tax and total — maps onto the import screens that QuickBooks, Xero, FreshBooks, Google Sheets and Excel provide, so the captured data flows into your books without a plugin or a proprietary format.
If your accounting tool expects a specific layout, export the CSV once and rearrange the columns to match; the structure stays identical for every invoice after that. Either way, the data you push into your ledger reflects the reviewed form, so your accounts payable records match the genuine supplier invoice.
Secure, on-device invoice extraction
Supplier invoices carry account numbers, pricing and contact details you are often contractually obliged to protect, so this tool never uploads them. The PDF is read and the CSV or clipboard text is produced entirely in your browser — nothing is sent to, stored on, or logged by a server. Keeping extraction on your device protects confidential supplier terms, keeps the workflow fast, and means reviewing each field before export is the only gate between the invoice and your books. The tool speeds up honest bookkeeping; the figures you export should always match the real invoice.