Log the week, download a clean PDF — or turn the hours straight into an invoice.
A timesheet has two jobs: prove the hours to whoever pays for them, and turn into a bill. Most tools do the first and abandon you at the second. Here, the week you log — Monday through Sunday, hours and notes per day — downloads as a clean, professional PDF timesheet, and the Convert to invoice button rebuilds the same week as an hours × rate invoice: each worked day becomes a line item with its date and notes, your rate applied, totals computed. The invoice opens in the full editor, where your business profile, numbering and templates take over.
Hourly freelancers attach the timesheet to the invoice (clients pay faster when the evidence arrives with the bill). Contractors on weekly approval send the PDF for sign-off, then convert the approved week to an invoice — same numbers, by construction. Agencies use it per-person, per-client, with the project field keeping engagements separate. There are no seats, no plans and no upload: the whole tool runs in your browser, offline if needed.
Yes — “Convert to invoice” creates an hours×rate invoice in your workspace with each worked day as a line item, then opens it in the editor.
Set an hourly rate and the PDF shows total hours, the rate and the amount. Without a rate it is an hours-only timesheet, suitable for employer approval.
Yes — hours accept decimals in 0.25 steps (e.g. 7.75).
Nowhere. It lives in your browser while you work, and only on the PDF you download. Converted invoices are saved to your on-device workspace.