About us
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AI powered
OCR for Utility Bills
Convert Utility Bill Images to Text with Free OCR Tool
or drag and drop a file
Supports all image, video and audio formats, up to 100MB and 1 hour recording
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
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Frequently Asked Questions
The OCR tool extracts text from images, such as utility bills, using Optical Character Recognition technology. It converts the text you see in photos or scanned documents into digital, editable text.
Upload an image of the utility bill to our OCR tool. It will automatically detect and extract the text from the image, which you can then copy or download as plain text.
Our OCR tool supports JPEG, PNG, GIF, BMP, WebP, and TIFF formats among others. You can upload utility bill images in any of these formats to extract the text.
Yes, the tool can be used for free. Free users can process images and preview the extracted text. To download the full text or save it, logging in might be required.
While this platform focuses on OCR extraction via image uploads, Python developers can explore OCR libraries like Tesseract for programmatic text extraction.
Simply upload photos or scans of your utility bills. The OCR tool will extract the text, allowing you to save it for digital record keeping and easy accessibility.
No. The OCR tool extracts plain text only, without preserving the layout, tables, or formatting of the original document.
Yes, you can upload multiple images, up to a maximum of 100 MB each. The text will be extracted from each image and combined.
The tool can recognize handwritten text, but accuracy may vary based on the quality and clarity of the handwriting.
The OCR tool focuses on extracting textual information. It does not categorize or process specific types of data like schedules or player info from images.
Yes, there is a maximum file size limit of 100 MB per image. Larger files should be resized or split before uploading.
After extracting text, logged-in users can save the results directly to their Evernote account for organized record keeping.
No, the tool does not process PDFs directly. Convert PDFs to image files or take screenshots, then upload those images.
The tool provides plain text output, which you can copy into a word processor for editing. Direct editing within the tool is not supported.
No, the OCR tool requires an internet connection as all processing is done online. However, you can download the extracted text for offline use.