Every accounting software vendor pitching to a Hong Kong SME in 2026 will mention “receipt OCR” or “automatic receipt capture” within the first slide of the demo. The marketing language has converged on the same set of phrases — “snap a photo and we’ll do the rest,” “AI-powered receipt scanning,” “paperless bookkeeping” — and the reality varies enormously between products. Some genuinely do most of the work; others produce a rough draft that still needs an hour a week of human attention. The gap between marketing and reality is wider in this feature than almost any other in the SME accounting software stack.
The gap matters more for Hong Kong specifically because HK receipts are bilingual or trilingual reality — a typical week’s worth of receipts will mix English chains (Starbucks, supermarkets), Traditional Chinese SMEs (printing shops, restaurants), Simplified Chinese receipts from cross-border purchases, and the occasional purely-numeric receipt with no merchant name printed. A receipt OCR engine that excels on US-English purchase receipts can perform shockingly badly when it meets a thermal-printed Cantonese cha-chaan-teng receipt with the merchant name in TC and the line items in TC + numbers.
What “receipt scanning” actually means in 2026
The label covers four mechanically distinct workflows, and which one a vendor actually offers materially changes the buying decision.
Image storage only. The lightest tier — software lets you attach a photo of a receipt to a manually-created transaction. No data extraction, no automatic categorisation. You’re still typing the merchant, amount and date by hand. This is the “we have receipt scanning” claim that most free or entry-tier products mean.
OCR data extraction. Software runs the photo through OCR, attempts to extract the structured fields (merchant, date, total, tax amount, line items where present), and pre-fills a transaction draft. You review the draft, correct any errors, and post. This is the realistic mid-tier offering — extraction works most of the time on clear receipts, less reliably on dense or low-quality ones.
OCR + automatic categorisation. On top of extraction, the software learns which expense category each merchant maps to and pre-fills it. After a few weeks of corrections, the categorisation reaches 80–90% accuracy on recurring merchants. New merchants always need a manual decision the first time.
OCR + categorisation + bank-feed match. The most mature tier — receipt is captured, OCR extracts amount and date, the software then matches that against the corresponding line in the bank feed and posts the transaction without further human input. This is the workflow that genuinely saves time. It depends on bank-feed quality (see our bank feed and auto-reconciliation guide) as much as on the OCR engine.
OCR accuracy — what to expect, what’s hype
Vendor marketing often quotes accuracy figures in the high 90s. Those numbers are usually either (a) measured on a controlled test set of pristine receipts, or (b) measured on individual fields where “amount correct” is reported separately from “merchant correct” and “line items correct” — so a receipt where only the amount is right counts as a 33% success in terms of useful output but 100% on the headline accuracy metric.
Real-world expectations for a HK SME in 2026, on a typical mixed-receipt batch:
- Total amount — extracted correctly 90–95% of the time on legible receipts. Fails on faded thermal paper, foreign-currency receipts where the engine misreads the symbol, and receipts where the amount is split across multiple lines.
- Merchant name — 70–85% on English merchants, 50–70% on Chinese merchants (engine variation here is large), much worse when the printed merchant name differs from the legal entity name.
- Date — 90%+ on receipts with clear dates; HK SMEs sometimes hit edge cases when receipts are printed in DD/MM/YYYY format and the engine assumes US-style MM/DD/YYYY.
- Line items — wildly variable. Most engines do not attempt detailed line-item extraction by default; those that do typically work on structured restaurant or supermarket receipts and fail on services receipts.
- Tax amount — HK has no VAT/GST so this field rarely matters, but engines tuned for VAT jurisdictions sometimes guess at a tax line that doesn’t exist.
The honest framing for a buyer: assume OCR will save you typing on roughly 70–80% of receipts and require correction on the rest. That is still a meaningful productivity gain — but it is not “no human in the loop.”
Mobile capture vs desktop scan
The two capture workflows have different ergonomics and different accuracy profiles.
Mobile capture — the app on the owner’s phone. Photograph the receipt at the moment of payment, before it disappears into a wallet. Edge detection crops the receipt automatically, perspective-corrects it, and uploads to the cloud. This is the workflow that genuinely changes SME bookkeeping behaviour, because the receipt never reaches the back-office shoebox to begin with.
Desktop scan — physical receipts collected and processed in batches at month-end via a flatbed or sheet-feed scanner. Higher image quality (controlled lighting, no perspective skew), so OCR accuracy is typically 5–10 percentage points better than mobile. But the workflow only succeeds if someone is disciplined about collecting and processing the batch.
For most HK SMEs the right answer is “mobile by default, desktop for the high-value or audit-critical receipts.” Mobile catches the volume; desktop ensures that the receipts you can’t afford to lose (rental, professional fees, large equipment purchases) have a high-quality image on file.
Audit trail — does scanning satisfy IRD’s 7-year retention rule?
Section 51C of the Inland Revenue Ordinance requires every business carrying on a trade or profession in Hong Kong to keep “sufficient records” of income and expenditure for at least 7 years. The legal text is technology-neutral — it does not require paper.
IRD’s published practice (Departmental Interpretation and Practice Note 21) accepts electronic records, including scanned images of original documents, as satisfying Section 51C provided that the electronic record is a true and complete reproduction, is readily accessible for inspection, and the underlying system has reasonable controls against alteration. In practice this means a scanned receipt with a clear image, stored in software that maintains a tamper-evident log of when it was uploaded and modified, satisfies the retention rule.
Two practical implications. First, once a receipt is scanned and the image is stored in your software with retention controls, you can shred the paper (subject to your own internal policy on signed legal documents — receipts are not signed legal documents). The shoebox is genuinely closeable. Second, the audit-trail features of the software matter — if the software allows transactions to be edited without retaining the original image and the edit history, the retention rule is at risk. Verify this in the demo.
What to demo before buying
A 30-minute demo with the following test set will tell you more than any vendor sales deck:
- Bring your own receipts. Bring 10 real receipts from your own business — not the vendor’s curated demo set. Include at least 3 TC-language receipts, 2 thermal-printed faded receipts, and 1 multi-currency receipt. Watch the OCR work in real time.
- Test the bilingual handling. Specifically check that a TC merchant name is preserved, that the engine doesn’t transliterate it into pinyin or skip it, and that the resulting transaction has a usable description.
- Check the correction workflow. When OCR gets a field wrong, how many clicks does it take to correct? If the software requires re-uploading the image rather than editing the extracted fields in place, the workflow will frustrate fast.
- Ask about retention controls. Specifically: can a transaction be edited after posting without an audit trail? If yes, IRD compliance is at risk. If the software keeps every change versioned, you’re safe.
- Test bank-feed match. Capture a receipt that matches a known bank-feed line, and watch whether the software auto-matches and posts. This is where the productivity gain actually lives.
How Giga Accounting by 凌峰會計 can help
Giga Accounting by 凌峰會計 handles bilingual receipt OCR (English + Traditional Chinese) on mobile capture, desktop scan or email-forward intake, with full audit-trail retention controls that satisfy Section 51C. Storage is included in the standard licence — the 10GB-per-company allocation means receipts don’t need to be purged at year-end to make space, which is the silent gotcha on per-storage-tier pricing in some competitor products.
If you’d like to see the receipt-OCR workflow on your own receipts, get in touch for a 20-minute hands-on demo, or see our flat per-company pricing. For the bank-feed half of the receipt-to-reconciled-transaction loop, see our bank feed and auto-reconciliation guide; for the broader pricing context where OCR usually gates a tier, see our accounting software pricing guide; and if you’re testing this against the free-software entry tier first, see our free accounting software in HK guide.