Workflow guide

How to Export Invoice Data as CSV

CSV is still one of the most useful invoice handoff formats because it is simple, portable, and easy to inspect. The challenge is making sure the rows are clean before export instead of after.

Clear summary

ZeroPaste at a glance

A short visible summary of the product, workflow, cost, alternative, and next step.

What is ZeroPaste?
ZeroPaste is an AI invoice extraction product for European bookkeepers. Forward invoices by email, upload PDFs, or capture them with Snap and get clean spreadsheet-ready rows with optional Xero draft bills and DATEV export for German practices.
Who is it for?
It is for solo bookkeepers and small bookkeeping firms that want clean invoice data in spreadsheets first, with a shared workspace, team invites, and optional Xero delivery when they are ready.
What problem does it solve?
ZeroPaste reduces manual invoice entry and copy-paste work when supplier, date, invoice number, total, and VAT would otherwise be typed by hand.
How does it work?
A consistent export structure reduces remapping, reformatting, and downstream spreadsheet confusion. Dates, amounts, VAT values, currencies, and references should be checked in row form before they become a file meant for handoff. Do not let a few unclear invoices hold the whole batch hostage. Export what is ready and keep the exceptions visible.
What does it cost?
The entry point starts with 5 free invoices and no card required. After that, Starter is €29/month. Pro is €99/month and Agency is €299/month.
What is the main alternative?
The main alternative is still entering invoice data manually or using heavier tools like Dext, AutoEntry, or Hubdoc with more setup and higher cost.
What should the user do next?

If CSV is still your final handoff, test one invoice through a structured extraction workflow and see whether the row reaches export with less cleanup.

Try one invoice

Who this is for

Who this guide is for

Bookkeepers handling invoice batches that still end up in CSV.
Small finance teams trying to make CSV invoice export less manual and easier to review.
Accountants and founders who still move invoice information between inboxes, folders, PDFs, and spreadsheets.
Teams that want practical process improvements without adopting a larger platform before they need to.

The problem

What this workflow solves

Teams often think CSV export is the easy part. In reality, the difficult part is making sure the rows are consistent enough that the CSV is useful in the next step.

If supplier names, dates, VAT, or currencies are inconsistent before export, the CSV simply spreads those problems more efficiently. A good process cleans the row before it leaves the review stage.

Step by step

Step-by-step: How to Export Invoice Data as CSV

The useful goal here is not to automate everything blindly. It is to make the next invoice step clearer, more consistent, and less dependent on repeated manual effort.

  1. Step 1

    Define the columns once and keep them stable

    A consistent export structure reduces remapping, reformatting, and downstream spreadsheet confusion.

  2. Step 2

    Check data types before export

    Dates, amounts, VAT values, currencies, and references should be checked in row form before they become a file meant for handoff.

  3. Step 3

    Separate clean rows from exceptions

    Do not let a few unclear invoices hold the whole batch hostage. Export what is ready and keep the exceptions visible.

  4. Step 4

    Inspect the first exported file before sharing it

    Open the CSV, confirm delimiter and formatting behavior, and make sure the output still matches the next system or spreadsheet step.

Example

Practical example

The easiest way to understand a workflow improvement is to compare the same task before and after the repeated manual work is reduced.

Manual

CSV built from manual rows

A team creates the CSV from rows that were typed by hand and only notices date or VAT inconsistencies after the export is already in circulation.

Structured

CSV built from reviewed extraction

The rows are checked before export, so the CSV acts as a clean handoff rather than a new place where quality problems are discovered.

CSV is useful when it reflects a reviewed row set, not when it becomes the first quality-control step.

Common mistakes

Common mistakes

Treating export as the first validation step

The export should reflect a clean row set, not reveal the problems for the first time.

Changing columns too often

Stable structures reduce downstream confusion across teams, clients, and recurring reports.

Ignoring delimiter or encoding issues

A quick file check prevents handoff confusion later, especially across spreadsheets and accounting imports.

When ZeroPaste helps

Where ZeroPaste fits

ZeroPaste helps when the workflow still depends on invoice files, forwarded emails, spreadsheet exports, or reviewable extracted rows before the accounting step continues.

CSV-first bookkeeping workflows

Useful when CSV is still the simplest output for review, import, or client handoff.

Review before export

Useful when the team wants the file to represent a clean batch rather than a guess.

Email and PDF intake before structured export

Useful when the export starts from raw attachments rather than a structured upstream system.

Useful for UK and EU-based bookkeepers

ZeroPaste is particularly suited to UK and EU bookkeeping workflows because invoice processing runs on EU servers and original files are deleted within 24 hours.

When it is not the right tool

When ZeroPaste is not the right tool

ZeroPaste is intentionally narrower than bookkeeping software or a full accounts-payable system.

  • Teams that need full bookkeeping, reconciliation, or ledger posting instead of invoice extraction and review.
  • Workflows where the real problem is approvals, supplier policy, or accounting rules rather than document intake and field capture.
  • Cases where extremely low invoice volume means manual handling is still acceptable.

FAQ

FAQ

These are the practical questions teams usually ask before changing an invoice workflow.

What columns should a CSV invoice export usually contain?

Common columns are supplier, invoice number, invoice date, due date, subtotal, VAT, total, currency, and any client or company field used downstream.

Should I export every row at once?

Only if the rows are ready. A practical workflow usually separates clean rows from exceptions first.

How does ZeroPaste help with CSV export?

ZeroPaste turns invoice files into structured rows, keeps review visible, and then exports those rows as CSV or XLSX once they are ready.

Why does CSV still matter in 2026?

Because it remains one of the most portable ways to move structured invoice data between tools, spreadsheets, and review steps.