Paid Bills
Bills you’ve marked paid will appear here. This list saves in your browser.
Bills due in the next 7 days. Mark paid or snooze 3 days.
| Name | Amount | Cycle | Autopay | Notes | Actions |
|---|
Bills you’ve marked paid will appear here. This list saves in your browser.
Bills you’ve snoozed will appear here. This list saves in your browser.
| Bill | Amount | Snoozed At | Note |
|---|
Where is my data saved? In your browser’s local storage on this device. Export CSV/.ics anytime.
How accurate is the bi‑weekly map? It’s an approximation (every two weeks). You can still add calendar reminders via .ics for exact schedules.
Can I reset? Use Delete on individual bills or clear your browser’s site data.
Bi‑weekly items use an anchor date so they repeat every 14 days exactly. Quarterly items support a start month to offset your quarters.
Annual bills use month/day (e.g., insurance renewal).
Export a single .ics for all bills or per‑bill files. We include a 24‑hour pre‑event alert so you get a reminder even for manual bills.
On macOS, use ⌥ Option instead of Alt.
Download a template, fill it in, then use Import CSV above.
Your data saves to this browser only (localStorage). We do not connect to your bank or send your entries anywhere. You control every export.
Updated September 27, 2025
Every household has a rhythm—money comes in on specific days and drifts out in patterns. Map that rhythm so bills feel predictable instead of chaotic.
Identify items that swing (utilities, usage‑based phone, cloud storage). Add a buffer category and cap monthly spend—a small rule prevents big surprises.
Many providers post payments by end‑of‑day Eastern or earlier on Fridays/holidays. Note the cut‑off time in the bill’s notes so “same‑day” means the right day.
Statement date opens the cycle; due date ends it. If you move due dates, confirm the statement period doesn’t shift unfavorably (interest or proration).
Track only three things per bill: date, old ↔ new amount, and reason (promo ended, taxes changed, plan upgrade). Patterns show up within three entries.
Late, paper, convenience, or international fees are often optional. Keep a running list and remove the cause: switch to e‑bill, consolidate due dates, or choose ACH over card.
Fee Courtesy: “Hi, I’ve been a customer since 2021. I had a one‑time delay this month—could you waive the late fee as a courtesy?”
Due‑Date Check: “I’m consolidating payments mid‑month. Do you offer alternative due dates for long‑term customers?”
Promo Review: “I noticed my rate increased. Are there loyalty or retention offers available that match my usage?”
Many people use BillMap as a tiny morning ritual. Open the tool, glance at the next seven days, and make sure today’s due items have a plan—either they are on autopay, or you know which account will cover them.
If something looks tight, move a flexible bill, pause a subscription, or add a note so you remember what you changed and why.
Once a week, do a slightly deeper reset: clear old notes that no longer matter, add new bills, adjust paydays if your schedule has shifted, and export a fresh .ics file if needed. Treat this like cleaning up your calendar for the week.
Over time, the combination of a quick daily glance and a weekly reset keeps surprises from piling up.
At the end of the month, compare what you planned against what actually happened. Did any bills slip through? Did you rely on your credit card more than expected? Use those insights to tweak due dates, autopay choices, and notes for the next month.
Some of the most disruptive expenses are the ones that show up once or twice a year: insurance renewals, membership dues, holiday spending, or big service visits. If they are not on your map, they can feel like they came out of nowhere.
Add these as separate items with clear labels and notes. When you see them on the calendar months in advance, you can set aside small amounts ahead of time instead of scrambling when the due date hits.
As your bill system stabilizes, consider assigning one line on your map to a “buffer” or “bill cushion” transfer. Even a modest recurring amount can give you breathing room when a bill is higher than usual or a paycheck arrives late.
Trips and short-term changes can throw off your sense of timing. Before you travel, scan the map for bills that fall while you are away and decide whether to pay them early, rely on autopay, or adjust dates. Leaving yourself a note on the bill can make it easier to remember what you set up when you return.