Help

Short answers to the questions that actually come up. If yours is not here, write to [email protected].

Downloading a template

Click the download button on any template page and the .xlsx file saves to your device — a direct download, with no account, form or payment in between. The file is a normal spreadsheet: keep it, rename it, copy it per month or per project as many times as you like.

Opening the file in Google Sheets or Excel

Google Sheets needs the file uploaded first: either import it from File > Import inside Sheets, or drag it into Google Drive and open it there. Excel and LibreOffice open the downloaded file directly with a double-click. The guide How to open a template in Google Sheets walks through every option, including Drive's automatic conversion setting.

Templates in your language

Every template ships in twelve language editions, each as its own file — tabs, labels, dropdowns and date and currency formats translated, not just the page around it. Download from the template page in your language and the file matches. The formulas and structure are identical across editions, so a household can mix languages on the same template.

License and commercial use

The templates are free for personal and commercial use, and you can modify them however you need. What is not allowed is redistributing or reselling the files themselves as your own template product. The templates license page has the full terms in plain words.

More help

For questions about Google Sheets itself — sharing, permissions, functions — the official Google Docs editors help is the place to look. For anything about a Sheetorial template, the email above reaches the person who built it.