An App Won't Track Your Travel Expenses. A Habit Will.
You don’t need a complicated app. You need a simple habit.
The shoebox full of crumpled receipts is a cliché for a reason. So is the week-after-vacation scramble to figure out what that weird ₩17,000 charge on your credit card was. You have the data. You just don't have a system.
It was 4:17 PM. I was sitting on a plastic stool in a Bangkok alley, sweating through my shirt and staring at a receipt for boat noodle soup that cost less than a dollar. I'd been "tracking" expenses in a little notebook for two weeks, and it was already a disaster. My 2011 Honda Civic back home suddenly felt like a distant, financially-stable dream. That’s when I realized the tool doesn't matter if the habit isn't there.
Forget Most Features
The app store is a graveyard of over-engineered solutions. You're not running a multinational corporation; you're just trying to figure out if you can afford another museum ticket or if you should eat street food for the third time today.
Ignore the apps that promise to do your taxes and manage your stock portfolio. Focus on what actually makes a difference on the road.
- Multi-currency support. This is non-negotiable. The app has to let you enter an expense in Euros, Baht, or Pesos and automatically know what that means in your home currency. If you have to do the math yourself, you’ve already lost.
- Offline mode. You will not always have wifi. You’ll be in the back of a tuk-tuk or on a train in the middle of nowhere when you need to enter an expense. The app has to work when your phone is basically a brick.
- Receipt Scanning. This isn't just for record-keeping. It's for speed. Taking a quick photo of a receipt is faster than typing everything in, which means you're more likely to actually do it. Good apps use OCR to pull the vendor and total for you.
That’s it. Anything else is a bonus that probably just gets in the way.