Use cases
Expense Logger — where it earns its place
On Expense Logger —
The parking ticket from the client visit is in a coat pocket, becoming lint. Expense Logger gives every business expense a proper row while the memory is fresh: what it was, the amount, a category — supplies, travel, software, fees, or other — and the date. … On this page: three concrete ways a solo founder or two-person team reaches for the Expense Logger, and the signals that tell you it fits.
When the Expense Logger earns its place
As a tracker, the Expense Logger keeps expense, amount, category, and date — no more, no less — so the record is small enough to actually read back.
Most tools in this category — HubSpot, Pipedrive, Notion CRM templates, a spreadsheet that got out of hand — solve a version of the same problem, then bill you monthly for the privilege of remembering it. The Expense Logger takes the opposite bargain: one file, once, kept.
Three scenarios drawn from money, accounting, and business
The everyday one: you open the Expense Logger on a Tuesday morning, log what needs logging, and close it. Two minutes. The record is more honest than the app that pinged you to remind you.
The specific one: — the workflow it names is the record that most needs a home outside a subscription. Some people use only the Expense Logger. Some fold it into a Swiss Knife next to five others. Both are correct.
The out-of-band one: months later, you want to look back. The Expense Logger still opens because it is a file. There is no login lapsed, no export deadline missed. The record is where you left it.
Signals it fits a solo founder or two-person team
You want a business workflow that behaves like a document, not a service. You are comfortable typing your own numbers in. You would rather own the file than rent the log. Weight in the knife: 1. Manual: no manual — the tool is its own instructions.
Signals it fits
- You do this kind of record-keeping more than onceThe Expense Logger pays back every time you don't have to reinvent the shape.
- You want it offline, on your own machineNo account, no cloud, no vendor between you and the record.
- You're comfortable with a hand-kept fileThe Expense Logger is a document. It behaves like one.
Questions people ask
What categories does the Expense Logger use?
Five plain ones: supplies, travel, software, fees, and other. Each expense gets a description, an amount, a category, and a date — enough structure to be useful, not enough to be a chore.
Is this a full replacement for HubSpot?
For the working core of what most people use it for — yes. For enterprise features (team seats, integrations, auto-import), no. The Expense Logger is deliberately smaller and more honest about its scope.
Who is the Expense Logger not for?
A solo founder or two-person team's opposite: a team that needs shared cloud state, or someone who wants automation over ownership. Use a SaaS for that; use this for the file.
A business workflow that opens where you left it, on the machine you left it on.