Expense reports have been around since 1775 (if you do the math, that’s 246 years), and honestly, not a whole lot has changed since then. Case-in-point, they’re still miserable to do, take inordinate ...
Most companies these days put the onus on employees to pay for business-related expenses upfront and then submit an expense report for reimbursement. The system ensures that companies are never stuck ...
Imagine being in training in a different country than where you work. What would you do if your business expense report wasn’t approved? In today’s story, the employees in this situation decide to get ...
In the past, the free app Mint was arguably the most popular option for tracking expenses and budgeting. It was discontinued ...
Brex reports on IRS receipt requirements for business expenses, detailing what qualifies as valid receipts and necessary ...
Small costs add up. The $3 ATM fee at the airport, the $5 tip for the bellhop, the $2.50 for printing boarding passes at the hotel business center. These incidental expenses don’t fit neatly into ...
For decades, employee expense reporting has followed a familiar path: employees submit reports, managers approve them and the accounting department performs a final review. This workflow made sense ...
An expense account sounds simple enough, but it actually means two different things in business. First, it’s the process that lets employees pay for work expenses and get reimbursed by their company.