
Extract receipts and match them to real payments
Receiptor pulls data from your receipts. Getbeel does that too, then matches every invoice to your bank transactions, catches duplicates, and gives you spending analytics without per-document fees.
Why teams switch from Receiptor
Receipt extraction is step one. Reconciliation is the whole job.
Receiptor scans your inbox and WhatsApp for receipts, extracts line items, and exports them to your accounting tool. That covers data capture. But you still need to reconcile those receipts against bank statements, track which vendors you are overspending with, and catch duplicate charges before they cost you money. Getbeel handles the full lifecycle: it collects invoices from Gmail, extracts every detail with AI, auto-matches each one to bank transactions, and gives your team real-time spending dashboards. One tool instead of three.

Getbeel vs Receiptor
Why switch
Three reasons teams leave Receiptor for Getbeel
Match every invoice to a real bank transaction
Receiptor extracts data from receipts but stops there. You still need to manually check which invoices have been paid. Getbeel matches each invoice to the corresponding bank transaction so you always know what is settled, what is pending, and what is overdue.
No surprise charges as your volume grows
Receiptor charges per document extracted and per entity analyzed, with overage fees that add up fast. At 100 invoices a month, you could hit their cap and pay extra. Getbeel gives you predictable pricing with no per-document limits, so your costs stay flat even as your business scales.
Catch duplicate invoices before you pay twice
When vendors resend invoices or emails get forwarded multiple times, duplicates pile up. Receiptor does not flag them. Getbeel detects duplicate invoices automatically, saving your team from costly double-payments and hours of manual cross-checking.

Ready to go beyond receipt extraction
Connect your Gmail, import your bank transactions, and let Getbeel handle the rest. No per-document fees, no overage surprises. Most teams are up and running in under five minutes.