If you work as a freelance graphic designer, your business expenses look nothing like a salaried employee's. You're juggling Adobe Creative Cloud, stock photo licenses, client travel, and a long tail of small purchases — most of them deductible, all of them easy to forget.
Independent graphic designers typically spend around €600 per year on tools alone. Multiply that across hardware, training, insurance and travel and you can lose four figures in unclaimed deductions just by misplacing receipts.
The 30-second rule for graphic designers
The single biggest leak in freelance bookkeeping isn't dishonesty — it's friction. Every receipt you don't capture in the first 30 seconds is one you'll probably never enter at all. The fix is workflow: scan, categorize, file, in three taps, the moment the receipt hits your hand.
What graphic designers should track
Build categories around your actual workflow. Beyond Adobe Creative Cloud and stock photo licenses, also tag: hardware (computer, peripherals), training (courses, books, conferences), travel (transport, lodging, business meals), software, professional insurance, and home-office overhead.
The niche tip most graphic designers miss
Stock asset purchases on Envato or Shutterstock are 100% deductible if licensed under your business name — keep the invoice PDF, not just the email confirmation.
How SnapCost helps
SnapCost is built for solo freelancers like you. Snap a receipt, the AI extracts the merchant, total, VAT and category in seconds. Tag by client and project. Export a CSV or PDF for your accountant in one click. Works offline, syncs when you're back online — perfect for client sites and travel.