Forwarding receipt emails the smart way
Forwarding receipts one at a time works. Forwarding them automatically, by rule, is what turns email receipts from a chore into background noise.
You get a personal forwarding address
Every account has a unique address shaped like yourtoken@ingest.rct-keep.com. It's yours, it doesn't expire, and anything you forward to it lands in your account. Treat it like a private API key — don't post it on the internet, don't share it casually, and rotate it from Settings if you suspect it's leaked.
Find yours under Settings → Forwarding. There's a Gmail filter file you can download too, which we'll get to in a moment.
The simple manual version
For people who only see five or ten receipts a week, manual forwarding is fine. When a receipt lands, hit forward, paste the address, send. The email lands in rct-keep with the original attached, and you can throw the original away on the email side if you like.
One small gotcha: forward, don't reply. Replies usually mangle the original headers and HTML; forwards keep the message intact.
The filter rule version (recommended)
The cleaner pattern is a Gmail filter that watches for receipt-shaped mail and auto-forwards it. There are a few sender patterns most receipts share — noreply@, receipts@, orders@, billing@ — plus subjects with words like "your receipt", "order confirmation", "tax invoice".
The pre-made Gmail filter file in Settings ships with these patterns already configured. You import it once, hit "Create filter", and Gmail does the work from then on.
What about Outlook, iCloud, Fastmail?
Same idea, slightly different UI. Outlook calls them "Rules" under Settings → Mail → Rules. iCloud Mail has rules in Mail.app. Fastmail has the most flexible rules system of all of them. The trigger conditions are the same: from-address patterns plus subject keywords. The action is the same: forward to your token address.
If your provider doesn't support auto-forward at all, the fallback is connecting the inbox directly via Gmail OAuth or IMAP. That's a different setup but lands the same outcome.
Watch for the over-forward
The classic mistake when setting up a new filter is making it too broad. A rule that forwards every email containing "invoice" will also catch invoice-shaped marketing, "free invoice template" newsletters, and that one friend who works in accounts. After turning a filter on, check the receipts list for a week — if non-receipts are sneaking in, narrow the rule.
What if you change email providers?
Your forwarding address is yours regardless of which mailbox sits behind it. If you switch from Gmail to Fastmail, set the forwarding rule up on the new side; the address itself doesn't change.
This works even better inside Receipt Keep — start a 14-day free trial.
When you're ready to do this in rct-keep, these are the click-by-click pages.
This works even better inside Receipt Keep — start a 14-day free trial.