Our Mission
BillMap exists to reduce stress. We built a tool that shows exactly what’s due this week, what’s covered by autopay, and what needs a tap. No bank links—just clarity.
BillMap is designed for a 60‑second weekly ritual. Add your bills once; check what’s due this week; mark paid. That’s it.
Your entries live in your browser’s local storage. No accounts. Export anytime.
BillMap exists to reduce stress. We built a tool that shows exactly what’s due this week, what’s covered by autopay, and what needs a tap. No bank links—just clarity.
We’re not a bank, budgeting suite, or data broker. We don’t sell access, and we don’t require an account.
Send feedback or ideas to everydayroyalties@gmail.com. Real‑world usage informs what we ship next.
BillMap started as a weekend tool to stop late fees. We didn’t want bank hookups or complex budgets—just a clean weekly view and a calendar we could trust. As more friends used it, we added exports and the autopay map while keeping the promise: simple, private, predictable.
Every screen answers a single question. On the tool page: “What do I owe this week?” On exports: “How do I get this on my calendar?”
Local‑first storage with backup/restore and open formats so you can move between devices without lock‑in.
No nudges to spend or borrow. No upsells. Your information stays where you put it.
A bill record contains only what’s needed to calculate next due dates and help you act:
This structure powers the “This Week” list, the autopay map, and .ics exports without storing bank credentials or transaction history.
“I finally stopped getting dinged by surprise renewals.” • “Seeing just this week’s bills lowered my stress immediately.” • “The .ics export means I don’t miss manual payments.”
Want to share your story? Email everydayroyalties@gmail.com.
We publish clear notes on how the tool calculates dates and how exports are generated. If we change how a rule works, we document it and why.
Questions? We answer them—start with the FAQ or write to us directly.
We do not believe that being “good with money” means loving spreadsheets. For most people, it simply means seeing what is coming this week, knowing which bills are safe on autopay, and having a realistic picture of how each paycheck will be used.
BillMap is designed to reduce decision fatigue. Once you map your core bills to specific dates and pay periods, you can focus on one small adjustment at a time instead of rebuilding your entire plan every month.
People tend to underestimate how many bills they are juggling. As they add rent, utilities, subscriptions, insurance, debt payments, and annual renewals, the map grows quickly. Seeing it all in one place often explains why the month has felt tight.
Over time, users describe a shift from “I hope there are no surprises” to “I know what this week looks like.” That quiet confidence is the outcome we care about most.
We see BillMap as the foundation for a broader set of simple money tools. Over time, we plan to explore features that make it easier to tag bills by priority, simulate changes in income, and visualize how tweaks to your schedule affect your cash flow.
Our goal is not to overwhelm you with dashboards, but to provide just enough structure that you can see cause and effect: when you move a bill, turn off a subscription, or add a new goal, the impact becomes obvious.
We assume that months will never go exactly as planned. Emergencies, surprises, and mistakes are part of life. BillMap is designed to help you recover quickly when something knocks your plan off track, rather than expecting you to stick to a flawless script.
BillMap grew out of the same frustrations many people feel: bill cycles that do not line up with paydays, surprise renewals, and the quiet anxiety of wondering whether you forgot something important. The language and examples throughout the site are shaped by those real-world moments.
We test ideas by asking a simple question: will this make the next month feel more predictable? If the answer is no, we keep refining until it does.
Sometimes a layout, feature, or example does not land the way we hoped. When we notice confusion or friction, we treat it as information rather than failure. BillMap will continue to evolve in response to that feedback so that the experience becomes clearer and calmer over time.
Casey Morgan — Personal Finance Writer & Budgeting Systems Specialist
Casey has spent six years writing about personal finance systems, bill management, and the psychology of financial organization. Their work focuses on practical, friction-free systems that work for people who hate budgeting. At BillMap, Casey writes all content and reviews the tool for real-world usability.