Track autism expenses without scrambling later.
Use one working sheet for therapy, travel, equipment, respite, and reimbursement notes. The goal is not perfect bookkeeping. The goal is a record you can actually use at tax time, during claims, or when you need to show what your family is paying out of pocket.
- Log expenses as they happen instead of rebuilding the year from receipts.
- Separate reimbursed costs from true out-of-pocket spending.
- Save a cleaner PDF whenever you need a shareable snapshot.
Quick Start
Use this weekly, not yearly
Open the tracker once a week, add whatever costs came up, and save a fresh PDF whenever you want a clean record. Even a partial habit is far more useful than waiting for tax season and trying to reconstruct everything at once.
- Track provider name, category, amount, and reimbursement status.
- Use the notes column for receipt status, claim IDs, or anything easy to forget.
- Open this in a browser tab for the easiest editing experience before printing.
Live Tracker
Expense log
Keep it simple. Add rows as needed and use the summary above to see how the year is building.
| Date | Provider or Expense | Category | Amount | Reimbursed | Receipt or Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Category Snapshot
Where the spending is landing
The breakdown updates as you type. Use it to spot where costs are compounding or where receipts are still missing.
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No entries yet Add expense rows above to generate the live category breakdown.
Keep with the tracker
Helpful notes to capture
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Receipt status Write whether the receipt is scanned, missing, or already submitted.
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Claim status Use notes for insurance claim IDs, pending approvals, or reimbursement dates.
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Why it mattered A short note on why the expense was needed can help later advocacy or appeals.
Year-End Notes