Invoicey is a complete invoicing platform for freelancers, contractors, and small businesses working across borders. The goal is to make billing feel boring again — a 60-second task you barely think about, not a weekly administrative chore. Below is an honest breakdown of how each feature works in practice, what problem it solves, and how it compares to the spreadsheet or free tool you may be replacing.
AI-powered invoice creation
The hardest part of any invoice is the first 30 seconds — remembering the client address, the tax ID, the right currency, the previous invoice number. Invoicey's AI assistant remembers all of that for you. Type a single line like “invoice Acme Ltd for 12 hours of React work at €85/h” and the assistant fills in the client profile, line items, VAT rate, invoice number, and due date. Every value is editable, nothing gets sent anywhere, and you stay in full control of the final document.
The same assistant scans uploaded receipts and extracts the supplier, VAT amount, date, and category in seconds. Photos from your phone, PDFs from your inbox, and scans from a flatbed all work. If the AI is uncertain about a field it highlights it rather than guessing — so you never end up with silently wrong bookkeeping data.
EU VAT done right
VAT is where most free invoice generators quietly fall apart. Invoicey ships with country-specific VAT rates for every EU member state plus the UK, Norway, and Switzerland, and handles the two cases that actually matter for freelancers:
- B2B cross-border (reverse charge): when you invoice a business VAT-registered in another EU country, Invoicey zero-rates the VAT, prints the exact legal phrase required in your invoice language, and includes both VAT numbers. No more copying a Stack Overflow answer at midnight before a deadline.
- Domestic micro-regimes: French auto-entrepreneurs get the “TVA non applicable, art. 293 B du CGI” note, Italian regime forfettario users get their exemption reference, Spanish autónomos get IRPF withholding, and UK sole traders below the VAT threshold get a proper non-VAT invoice.
All fields required by the EU Invoicing Directive 2006/112/EC are enforced before export — you cannot accidentally send an invoice missing the sequential number, the supplier address, or the supply date. That one rule alone prevents the most common VAT audit penalty.
Estimates that convert to invoices
A paid invoice usually starts life as a quote. Invoicey lets you draft a branded estimate, send it as a link your client can sign in the browser, then convert it into a live invoice with one click the moment it's accepted. Line items, prices, notes, and VAT carry over untouched. The history of the deal — estimate sent, viewed, accepted, invoiced, paid — is recorded on a single timeline so you can answer “did this ever get approved?” in two seconds, not twenty minutes of inbox archaeology.
Multi-currency and live FX
Invoicing a US client in USD while your books run in EUR used to mean a spreadsheet and a mid-market screenshot. Invoicey supports 30+ currencies with daily FX rates pulled from the ECB, and stores both the invoice-currency total and your base-currency equivalent on every document. When tax time comes you have a clean report of revenue in your home currency, and the original amount your client actually paid. No more arguing with your accountant about which date's exchange rate applied.
Automated payment reminders
Late payments are the #1 cause of cash-flow stress for freelancers. Invoicey's reminder system sends a polite nudge three days before the due date, a follow-up on the day, and an escalating chase sequence at +7 and +14 days if the invoice is still open. You write the tone once — friendly, formal, firm — and the automation handles it from there. Every reminder contains a direct payment link (Stripe, PayPal, or SEPA), so the client doesn't need to dig through email to find the original invoice.
Expense tracking and deductibles
Expenses are the quiet half of freelance finance. Invoicey's expense manager lets you snap a receipt, auto-categorize it, tag it to a client or project, and export the lot as a CSV your accountant will actually accept. Recurring subscriptions are detected and tagged automatically — so you don't forget to claim your Figma or GitHub seat at year end. Every expense is linked to the original receipt image, which is kept for the 10-year legal retention period required in most EU jurisdictions.
Free tools that work without an account
Alongside the main app, Invoicey ships a set of free standalone tools you can use without signing up: a VAT calculator covering every EU rate, a freelance rate calculator that works backwards from your target take-home pay, and a simple expense tracker for one-off projects. They're all genuinely free, with no email wall or trial countdown.
Privacy, data residency, and GDPR
Invoicey is built and hosted in the EU. Every byte of customer data — invoices, clients, expenses, uploaded receipts — stays on EU infrastructure, never leaves for training any model, and can be permanently deleted in one click from your account settings. We hold no payment-card data (Stripe does that), and we publish a clear privacy policy that actually reads like English. Data portability export gives you every invoice as PDF plus a machine-readable CSV/JSON bundle, no lock-in.
Built for the way freelancers actually work
Every feature above was designed by observing how solo operators actually spend their admin hours — not by copying the feature matrix of an enterprise ERP. You can use Invoicey from your phone between client calls, from a laptop at a coworking table, or from a desktop at home. Keyboard shortcuts cover every common action, offline mode keeps working during a flight, and the PDF output is pixel-identical across platforms so your brand looks the same whether a client opens the invoice in Gmail, Outlook, or printed on paper.
If you're moving from spreadsheets, from a free competitor, or from a legacy desktop tool, Invoicey's importer accepts CSVs from Zoho, Wave, FreshBooks, QuickBooks, Xero, and plain Excel — migration is usually a ten-minute job, not a weekend project. Start free, send three invoices this month, and decide if it's worth the €3.99 upgrade once you've felt the difference.