Head to head

Expensify vs Ramp: expense reports or card-first spend

Expensify sells per-member expense software; Ramp gives cards away and earns on interchange, US entities only. The sourced trade-offs, side by side.

By ExpenseFlow team
· 6 July 2026
Who is writing this: ExpenseFlow publishes this comparison and competes with both tools on the bookkeeping side. Every factual claim below links to the vendor's own page, and pricing was checked on 6 Jul 2026. Where ExpenseFlow has a stake, we say so in the clearly marked box further down.

The short version

Ramp's free tier is real but conditional: it assumes a US-registered entity with an EIN and $25,000 in a US bank, and its economics work when company spend moves onto Ramp cards. Expensify costs money per member but travels internationally and centres on receipts and reimbursement rather than card issuance. Choose by geography and by whether you will actually switch cards; those two facts decide it before any feature list does.

Feature Expensify Ramp
Pricing Collect at $5 per unique member/month; Control at $9 per active member with annual commitment plus Expensify Card usage, $18 without the card, $36 pay-per-use (as of July 2026). source Base tier free, funded by card interchange; Ramp Plus at $15 per user/month plus a platform fee based on team size (as of July 2026). source
Who can sign up Companies broadly; SmartScan reads receipts in 150+ currencies and reimbursement supports international employees. source US-registered corporations, LLCs, and LPs only: physical US address, EIN that cannot be waived, and at least $25,000 in a US business bank account; sole proprietors excluded. source
Core motion Employee scans receipt, expense joins a report, approvals run, reimbursement pays out, report exports to the ledger. source Company issues Ramp cards, spend happens on them with controls up front, transactions sync to the ledger with receipts matched. source
Card programme Expensify Card is optional but priced in: using it halves Control's per-member rate and earns 1% to 2% cash back. source Cards are the product: unlimited physical and virtual cards on the free tier, with spend controls attached. source
Xero integration Reimbursable expenses export as purchase bills after reimbursement; non-reimbursable spend as bank transactions after final approval. source Bidirectional sync of card transactions, reimbursements, and bill pay into Xero, configured from Ramp's accounting settings. source
AI coding depth SmartScan extracts merchant, date, total, and currency; category suggestions ride on top. source AI-driven expense review and auto-coded line items sit in the paid Ramp Plus tier; the free tier covers basic accounting rules. source

Where ExpenseFlow fits (our stake, disclosed)

ExpenseFlow overlaps with the receipt-and-books side of both products but issues no cards and moves no money: we capture client documents, extract every line, code them with a deterministic tax engine for HMRC, ATO, IRD, CRA, and IRAS jurisdictions, and sync them to Xero as drafts once your team approves. If your firm's clients are in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, or Singapore, where Ramp cannot onboard them at all, that is our home ground; stake disclosed, sources on the linked pages.

Two business models wearing similar software

Expensify and Ramp both promise the same relief, receipts that stop being anyone’s typing problem, but they monetise it from opposite ends, and the monetisation explains almost every product decision.

Expensify sells software per member. The receipts, reports, approvals, and reimbursement engine are the product, and the Expensify Card exists to subsidise it: run half your settled spend on the card and Control drops from $18 to $9 per active member. Ramp gives the software away and sells nothing to you at all on the base tier; it earns interchange every time a Ramp card is swiped. Software fees only appear at the Plus tier, where the deeper automation lives.

Neither model is a trick, but each has a gravitational pull. Expensify’s pricing rewards committing annually and adopting its card. Ramp’s free tier rewards moving your entire card programme onto Ramp, because that is the revenue. If you are unwilling to switch cards, you are a cost to Ramp and a customer to Expensify; if you are happy to switch, Ramp’s arithmetic is hard to argue with.

The border question

Before features, geography. Ramp onboards US-registered corporations, LLCs, and limited partnerships with a physical US address, an EIN, and at least $25,000 sitting in a US business bank account, and it excludes sole proprietors. Those requirements come from Ramp’s own signup documentation, and they are not softening with a sales call.

Expensify has no equivalent wall. SmartScan reads receipts in over 150 currencies, employees anywhere can submit claims, and reimbursement handles international staff. For a company or a client base outside the US, the comparison ends here: one of these products will not have you.

What each does with a receipt

Mechanically, Expensify’s unit is the expense report. SmartScan lifts the header off a receipt, the expense joins a report, approval chains and policy checks run, reimbursement pays the employee, and the finished report exports to the ledger: purchase bills for reimbursable spend after reimbursement, bank transactions for card spend after final approval. Books wait on workflow, by design.

Ramp starts before the receipt exists. Controls live on the card: merchant locks, limits, auto-expiring virtuals. The transaction arrives already known, the receipt gets matched to it, and the ledger sync is continuous rather than report-gated. Auto-coded line items and AI review belong to the paid tier, but the structural advantage is timing: card-first systems know about spend at authorisation, not at month-end.

What the accountant sees downstream

The two products also leave different fingerprints on the ledger, and whoever closes the books will have opinions. Expensify’s report-gated export means the ledger receives tidy, approved batches, but timing follows the workflow: a report stuck with an approver on holiday is spend the books cannot see yet. Accruals near period-end become a chase. Ramp’s continuous sync means transactions appear as they happen with receipts matched against them, so the ledger is current, but the coding quality depends on how well the rules were set up and, for line-level detail, on whether the company pays for Plus. Ask whoever reconciles the accounts which failure mode they would rather manage: completeness lag or coding cleanup. Their answer is worth more than most feature grids, because they are the person the choice actually lands on each month.

Choosing, quickly

US entity, willing to change card programmes, spend concentrated on cards: Ramp, and the free tier is a legitimate starting point. International footprint, reimbursement-heavy culture, or an immovable existing card setup: Expensify, priced per member, with the card discount as an option rather than a precondition.

And if the actual problem is client paperwork, supplier bills, and GST or VAT treatment across UK, AU, NZ, CA, or SG books, neither tool is aimed at you; that corner is where ExpenseFlow operates, as disclosed in the box above.

Expensify is a trademark of Expensify, Inc.. Ramp is a trademark of Ramp Business Corporation. ExpenseFlow is not affiliated with or endorsed by either company; all product facts are sourced from the vendors' public documentation and pricing pages, last checked 6 Jul 2026.

Questions, answered

Common questions

Is Ramp actually free?

The base tier has no software fee; Ramp earns interchange when spend runs on its cards, and the paid Ramp Plus tier at $15 per user per month adds the deeper automation. Free is genuine, but it presumes your company qualifies (US entity, EIN, $25,000 in a US account) and that you move spend onto Ramp cards.

Can a UK or Australian company use Ramp?

Not without a US entity. Ramp's own signup guide requires US registration, a physical US address, and an EIN on every application (as of July 2026). International subsidiaries of US companies are a different conversation; standalone non-US SMBs are out of scope.

Which handles employee reimbursement better?

Reimbursement is Expensify's native motion: claims, approvals, and payout to employees are the core loop. Ramp reimburses too, but its centre of gravity is eliminating reimbursement by putting controlled cards in employees' hands before they spend.

Do both work with QuickBooks and Xero?

Yes, both document integrations for QuickBooks Online and Xero, among others. The difference is what flows: Expensify exports workflow-finished expense reports, while Ramp syncs card transactions and bill payments continuously.

Keep exploring

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