Japan operators and advisors often need invoice and receipt records in a format their accounting software can actually import. A generic spreadsheet helps, but it still leaves accountants translating columns, tax fields, memo text, and encoding rules by hand.
countfor.me now supports vendor-specific CSV export files for Freee, Money Forward, and Yayoi. The workflow starts from reviewed transaction records, then prepares a CSV shaped for the accounting package your team or zeirishi uses.
What changed
- Export options now cover Freee, Money Forward, and Yayoi journal-style handoff files.
- Reviewed transaction records can be carried into accounting workflows without rebuilding the file from scratch.
- The export flow makes the vendor choice clearer before download, reducing the chance that teams send the wrong spreadsheet to the wrong system.
Why it matters
Each accounting product expects a different file shape. Freee, Money Forward, and Yayoi do not all use the same columns, tax wording, or encoding expectations, so a single flat spreadsheet is not enough once the workflow becomes operational.
The goal is to make month-end handoff calmer: operators review supplier records once, then pass a file to the accountant in a format that is closer to the destination system. Accountants still own the final review, but they should not have to rebuild clean transaction data just to start that review.
This also keeps the broader countfor.me loop intact. The same supplier documents that power product-level price tracking can now support cleaner accounting handoff, without asking the venue team to maintain another spreadsheet beside the system.