How to use Google Sheets & Excel expense guide daily

Download a free daily expense sheet in Google Sheets or Excel and let an AI computer agent update, categorize, and visualize your spending automatically!!
Advanced computer use agent
Production-grade reliability
Transparent Execution

Why Sheets, Excel & AI track

Every business owner and creator has lived this scene: it’s 10 p.m., you’re scrolling through card statements, trying to remember whether that $37 charge was client-related or just lunch. A simple daily personal expense sheet in Excel or Google Sheets turns that chaos into a clean story of where your money goes. Templates come preloaded with formulas, so you can focus on decisions instead of math. You see patterns fast—subscriptions you forgot, ad tests that quietly work, habits that slowly drain your runway.Now imagine you’re not even the one entering the numbers. An AI computer agent sits between your receipts, emails, and bank exports and your sheet. Each day it downloads the latest CSV, copies the rows into your template, tags categories, and flags anomalies. While you’re selling, creating, or closing clients, it’s quietly keeping a pristine, audit-ready log of your personal and business spend, without you lifting a finger.

How to use Google Sheets & Excel expense guide daily

You don’t need to be a CFO to get daily expenses under control. With the right workflows, your “expense sheet” becomes a living dashboard that updates itself.Below are three tiers of approaches—from fully manual to AI-agent driven—so you can start simple and grow into automation.### 1. Manual and Traditional Methods**Method 1: Download a ready-made Excel expense template**1. Open Excel on your computer.2. Go to **File → New**.3. In the search bar, type **“expense”** or **“budget”**.4. Browse templates like *Personal Budget* or *Expense Tracker* and choose one that has a daily or transaction-level sheet.5. Click **Create** to download and open it.6. Customize categories (e.g., Rent, Groceries, Ads, Software) in the template.7. Each day, open the file and add new rows for every transaction.Microsoft has a full guide on using templates here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/create-a-budget-in-excel-with-a-template-ecfdc708-9162-49ee-aee6-4a12bbd620b6**Method 2: Use a Google Sheets daily expense template**1. Go to https://sheets.google.com and log in.2. Click **Template gallery** at the top.3. Look for templates under *Personal* or *Finance* such as *Monthly budget* or *Expense tracker*.4. Click to create a copy in your Drive.5. Rename the sheet to something like **Daily Expenses 2026**.6. Adjust the columns (Date, Description, Category, Amount, Payment Method, Notes).7. Enter transactions daily.Google’s help on using templates: https://support.google.com/docs/answer/6000292?hl=en**Method 3: Import bank CSVs into Sheets or Excel**1. Log into your bank or card portal.2. Export transactions for the day or week as **CSV**.3. In **Excel**: open your expense template, go to **Data → Get Data → From Text/CSV**, select the file, and load it into a staging sheet. Microsoft docs: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/import-or-export-text-txt-or-csv-files-5250ac4c-663c-47ce-937b-339e391393ba4. In **Google Sheets**: open the sheet, click **File → Import → Upload**, choose the CSV, and insert into a new tab. Docs: https://support.google.com/docs/answer/9143382?hl=en5. Copy-paste or use formulas (like `=FILTER`) to move new rows into your main daily log.**Method 4: Evening “receipt inbox” ritual**1. Keep all receipts in a single place (a physical envelope or a folder in your email).2. Set a 10–15 minute block at the end of each day.3. Go through each receipt and type it into your Google Sheets or Excel template.4. Mark processed receipts as *Logged* so nothing gets double-counted.*Pros of manual methods*: full control, no setup complexity.*Cons*: time-consuming, easy to forget a day, error-prone when you’re tired.### 2. No-Code Automation with Tools**Method 5: Auto-log email receipts into Google Sheets**Use a no-code tool like Zapier or Make to push email data directly into your sheet:1. Create a dedicated email label/folder like **“Expense Receipts”**.2. In Zapier, set a trigger: **New email in Gmail with label “Expense Receipts”**.3. Add an action: **Create Spreadsheet Row in Google Sheets**.4. Map fields: Date = email date, Description = subject line, Amount = extract from body (many tools offer text parsing), Category = fixed or based on keywords.5. Point this to your daily expense sheet.This turns every tagged email receipt into a clean row without touching the keyboard.**Method 6: Log card transactions into Excel via automation**If your bank offers webhook-style feeds or connects to tools:1. Use a no-code platform that supports your bank or accounting tool (e.g., QuickBooks → Excel connectors).2. Trigger: **New transaction**.3. Action: **Add row to an Excel table stored in OneDrive or SharePoint**.4. Make sure your template is formatted as a **Table** in Excel so new rows append nicely.Microsoft explains using Excel as a connected data target here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/connect-excel-to-an-external-data-source-5fdc1fd6-2dce-4d38-9b8a-5a3ddf5b9183**Method 7: Use Google Forms as a mobile expense logger**1. Create a **Google Form** with fields: Date, Description, Amount, Category, Payment Method.2. Under **Responses**, click the Sheets icon to tie responses to a Google Sheet.3. Keep the form bookmarked on your phone.4. Every time you spend money, open the form and submit one entry in under 30 seconds.5. Your daily expense sheet is auto-filled with structured data.*Pros of no-code methods*: less manual typing, near real-time logging, works for teams.*Cons*: still fragmented; you must maintain Zaps/Scenarios, and you’re limited to apps with good integrations.### 3. Scaling with an AI Computer Agent (Simular)Once you’re sick of stitching tools together, an AI computer agent can behave like a tireless assistant who lives inside your desktop and browser.**Method 8: Agent that downloads statements and fills your Excel template**1. Define the workflow once: open browser, log in to bank, navigate to statements, download the latest CSV, open your Excel expense workbook, import the CSV into a staging tab, copy cleaned rows into the main daily log, save and close.2. In Simular Pro, you record or describe this full workflow. The agent interacts with your OS, browser, and Excel just like a human.3. Schedule it to run daily at a set time.4. Review the sheet occasionally; every row is transparent and editable.*Pros*: Works even with banks that have no APIs, production-grade reliability over thousands of clicks.*Cons*: Initial setup takes more thought; best run on a stable desktop environment.**Method 9: Agent that reads receipts and logs into Google Sheets**1. Store receipt PDFs or images in a folder (Google Drive, Dropbox, or local).2. Specify the routine: open folder, open each new file, read the vendor, date, and amount, then switch to your Google Sheets expense tracker and type the row into the next empty line.3. The Simular agent uses its vision and reasoning to interpret the screen, so it doesn’t rely on rigid coordinates.4. At the end, it can send you a short summary (e.g., “Today: 7 expenses, total $312.40”).*Pros*: Handles unstructured data (screens, PDFs) and multiple apps; highly flexible.*Cons*: Requires some initial testing to ensure it handles edge-case receipts.**Method 10: Multi-account, multi-sheet automation at scale**1. If you manage finances for several entities—personal, side project, agency—create a standard Google Sheets or Excel template for each.2. Configure a Simular Pro agent to: - Rotate through each account’s bank portal. - Download the relevant statements. - Open each matching sheet or workbook. - Append daily transactions and categorize them based on your rules.3. Integrate via webhook so another system (like your CRM or reporting stack) can trigger the agent after end-of-day reconciliations.*Pros*: Massive time savings, consistent processes across entities, transparent run logs you can audit.*Cons*: Best suited once you have a stable daily expense model you’re happy to scale.These three layers let you start with simple downloads and end with a full AI-powered bookkeeping assistant that never forgets a transaction.

Automate daily expense sheets with an AI agent now

Train Simular agent!
Set up Simular Pro with clear instructions: show it how you open Google Sheets and Excel, pick the right daily expense template, name the file, and store it where you want each new download.
Tune and test Simular
Run Simular Pro on a few sample days, watching every step as it grabs a template, downloads your daily personal expense Excel sheet, and syncs with Google Sheets until it runs flawlessly.
Delegate and scale runs
Once Simular Pro reliably builds and updates your daily expense sheets, schedule it or trigger via webhook so the agent handles every download and update while you focus on higher-value work.

FAQS