Still managing fuel expenses with receipts or corporate cards?
Exoft builds digital payment solutions that cut manual work and give you full visibility into fleet spending.
Published: 24 March, 2026 · 12 mins read
Traditional fleet payments come with many limitations, from hard-to-scale manual data entry to fraud risks. Digital fuel payment solutions offer a more convenient alternative that captures real-time data, seamlessly integrates with internal systems, and simplifies the payment process. Read Exoft’s guide to learn more about the limitations of traditional fuel payment methods and the benefits of their digital alternatives.
If fleet operations are core to your business, fuel expenses are likely your second-largest expense item after worker wages. In fact, they’re becoming the number one concern for fleet managers in 2026.
Traditional fuel cards cover the basics but miss out on many important features, like:
Without automated data flow, this leads to manual entry, which causes lost time, mistakes, and lower productivity. That’s why many fleet operators are moving to digital options like apps, wallets, and digital cards. Digital fleet payments are a win-win for everyone:
Drawing on Exoft’s experience in mobility software development, we’ll explore all perks of adopting digital fuel payments and how to make the switch.
Fuel is a major part of fleet payments, but it’s not the only one. As routes grow longer and fleets become more diverse, operators have to manage a much wider mix of expenses:
Traditional methods can technically handle this range, but traceability and compliance remain weak points. Without automated categorization, businesses struggle to keep clear audit trails, have a detailed overview of their expenses, and meet legal reporting requirements.
If you’re not using a modern digital fuel payment platform yet, you’re likely relying on one of the following three traditional payment methods.
Your driver stops by the gas station, fills the tank, and pays for the fuel with cash or their personal credit card. They then submit the paper receipt and an expense claim to your back office. Back office reviews these claims, either after the trip or at the end of the month, and distributes reimbursements. This approach is most common among small fleets and service SMEs with occasional trips, as well as companies working with short-term contractors.
| ✅ Advantages | ❌ Limitations |
|---|---|
| Flexibility. Reimbursements are easier to distribute, especially for irregular trips. | Manual workload. Every part of the process is manual, making it prone to error. |
| No upfront costs. You don’t need to buy a fuel card or pay for software. | Fraud risk. Drivers may overreport their spending or submit claims for refueling their personal vehicles. |
| No credit required. You also don’t need to wait for credit approval. | Scalability issues. Too many claims can create a huge backlog and cause delays. |
| Compliance risks. It’s harder to capture line-item data to recover VAT, while a missing receipt could cause problems during an audit. |
Instead of their personal payment methods, drivers may also use corporate credit or debit cards (Visa, MasterCard, etc.) at any gas station that accepts them. Every payment automatically shows up on bank statements, so no receipts are necessary. However, the back office still needs to categorize these transactions. You’ll typically see this in small and mid-sized fleets, as well as non-transportation businesses.
| ✅ Advantages | ❌ Limitations |
|---|---|
| Accepted anywhere. Drivers can easily pay at any gas station that accepts card payments, across countries. | Manual categorization. You have to separate fuel costs from other expenses manually. |
| Familiar workflows. Finance and accounting teams don’t have to learn to use new software. | Lack of integrations. There’s no way to integrate that data with telematics, vehicle identifiers, or fleet management systems. |
| All-in-one payment method. Banking cards can be used for all fleet payments, including accommodation, toll roads, parking, food, and EV charging. | Fraud risks. You can’t set limits on the fuel type, volume, vehicle, or location where the card can be used. |
For the driver, prepaid and stored-value cards work similarly to corporate banking cards. The only difference is that they can spend only as much as was preloaded onto the card or account. These cards tend to appeal to companies that struggle to get approved for credit cards, as well as small businesses with strict budget constraints. They’re also a natural fit for project-based, contract-based, or seasonal fleet operations where spending needs to be tightly scoped.
| ✅ Advantages | ❌ Limitations |
|---|---|
| Expense predictability. Drivers simply can’t spend more than you put on the card, making cost overruns impossible. | Manual deposits. Someone on the team has to add the funds to the card when needed. |
| Quick setup. Getting a prepaid card is faster than a corporate credit card, making it more suitable for short-term needs. | Potential disruptions. If the deposited funds run out, your fleet may come to a standstill until you top up the balance. |
| Reliance on forecasting. Underestimates lead to disruptions, and overestimates lock the funds on prepaid balances. |
Exoft builds digital payment solutions that cut manual work and give you full visibility into fleet spending.
Fuel payment apps, digital wallets, and digital fleet fuel cards have emerged to help businesses overcome the many limitations of traditional payment methods. Here’s how they work, along with their key benefits and challenges.
A fuel payment app or digital wallet enables drivers to pay for fuel on their mobile devices without a physical card. The whole process is fully digitized, from authorization and transaction itself to receipts and data reporting. Fleet managers don’t have to enter any data manually; it’s automatically loaded into dashboards like this one:
Source: Visa Cardless Fleet Payments, 2025
Switching to mobile devices also has its undeniable benefits: for example, drivers can initiate payments without even leaving their vehicle.
There are two most common friction points with fuel payment apps: technical reliability and data fragmentation. App outages or connectivity issues can leave drivers unable to pay. And when drivers use a mix of payment methods, transaction data tends to end up scattered across systems.
Pro tips from Exoft: We always recommend keeping a backup payment method on hand in case of connectivity problems. The solution to data fragmentation is a centralized platform with a unified reporting layer, like the one we built for one of our clients.
Fuel cards have been around since the 1960s, and fleet cards appeared in the 1980s. So, they’re hardly a new invention. In fact, they’re still used by 80% of European fleets, and the global fuel card market is expected to grow almost threefold by 2033.
Source: Grand View Research 2026
Historically, these cards have had an obvious appeal: substantial discounts. However, each card works only within a specific network, dictated by brand partnerships. Plus, in the U.S., an estimated 90% of fuel cards involve entering some additional data (vehicle number, driver number, odometer reading) at the pump every single time.
Relying on a physical fuel card has its downsides, too. It takes days or even weeks to receive a new one. Fraud, skimming, and card cloning remain a possibility.
That’s why fleet operators and fueling platforms alike are shifting toward digital fuel cards. For example, that’s why one of our clients turned to Exoft to add digitized fuel cards to its mobile fueling platform.
The two most common friction points with digital fleet cards are data fragmentation and driver resistance. Unstandardized data from multiple sources can quietly undermine your analytics rather than improve them. And drivers used to physical cards may take time to adjust, slowing things down early in the rollout.
Pro tips from Exoft: Standardize transaction data before loading it into your fleet management system (it makes a bigger difference than most teams expect). For the human side, a short transition period with self-service guides helps drivers get comfortable without disrupting daily operations.
Exoft builds payment platforms that connect fuel, EV charging, and expense data in one place.
In a global survey of 1,800 fleet decision-makers, 91% said they plan to increase investment in digital fleet solutions over the next five years. Reducing operational costs and improving efficiency are cited as the top driver by 52% of respondents. Fuel payment digitization sits at the center of that shift. But there’s much more reasons why businesses are shifting toward digital fleet payments.
Around the world, 18.3% of operators use hybrids, and another 11.6% report having EVs in their fleets. In Europe, the transition is more pronounced, with 45% of operators having integrated some hybrid or electric vehicles into their fleets.
Source: Fleet Benchmark Report 2026
Recovering VAT isn’t the only reason to track line-item data. New regulations, especially in Europe, require large corporations to monitor and report their carbon footprint. Calculating the said footprint requires combining both telematics and fuel/EV charging data.
Manual-only processes don’t scale well as the number of drivers, trips, and vehicles grows. And it costs businesses: 45.4% of fleet managers spend between 2 and 8 hours a week on manual data entry.
Source: Fleet Benchmark Report 2026
Across logistics, trucking, construction, and other industries, leaders estimate that 19% to 22% of their fleet costs are lost to fraud. Digital fleet payment solutions come with built-in anomaly detection to catch potential fraud.
The more drivers or managers have to enter data manually, the higher the risk of faulty data is. One study found that 34% of transactions contain incorrect odometer readings. Other common mistakes include incorrect driver IDs, vehicle numbers, etc.
Together, the factors listed above push fleet operators to adopt mobility platforms like the one we helped modernize and scale for a European provider of mobile fueling and fleet payment solutions.
Our client runs a platform that connects fuel retailers, fleets, and payment providers across 14 countries and 40,000+ stations. As the platform grew, so did the complexity: more payment types, more partners, more edge cases. We had to configure a completely custom flow for the reliability & security of the whole transaction flow: from transaction initiation and pump validation to nozzle returned and payment finalization.
Together, we achieved several important results: 3M+ transactions processed (less than 2 seconds required for transaction initiation), 40K+ connected fuel stations, and 200K+ connected EV charging sites.
That experience shaped much of how we think about fleet payments today, and why a good solution doesn’t just centralize payment methods but integrates them into broader fleet intelligence. Combined with telematics data, for example, transaction data can reveal:
Ready to switch to digital fleet payments? There are two ways you can go about it: adopt an off-the-shelf platform or build a custom one for your fleet. If you prefer the former, evaluate each option’s:
In some cases, none of the available off-the-shelf solutions turn out to be suitable. Perhaps, vendors don’t offer the coverage or integrations you need. Or, your fleet operations span too many regions, currencies, and fuel/EV networks. In that case, Exoft can build a custom fleet payment solution to help your business:
Exoft can unify your fleet payments and turn transaction data into insights ready to power operational and strategic decision-making.
Mounting reporting and compliance requirements, fraud concerns, and the rise of hybrid fleets make the switch to digital-first payments an imperative. They’re not just convenient; they also provide the valuable, accurate transaction data needed to calculate the fleet TCO, monitor fuel costs and operational efficiency, and make strategic fleet decisions.
Over the past decade, Exoft has helped fleet operators and other mobility businesses streamline processes and turn disparate data into an accurate bird’s-eye view of their operations. Discover what we can do for your mobility business from our mobility software development page.
Already have a specific request in mind? Discuss it with our experts directly!
What’s best for your business depends on your fleet type and size, the payment methods you need supported, required integrations, and the scale of your operations (local/national/international). No universally “best” solution fits everyone.
Yes, but as a backup payment method, not the main one. Virtual cards are more convenient, but they may not work in low-connectivity areas or during system outages.
Yes. For example, such apps allow you to set limits on fuel type, location, and time. They also automatically verify the driver and vehicle and detect spending anomalies.
Of course. Fuel payment systems offer APIs that securely load transaction data into other systems. Reach out to us if you need a reliable partner to implement this integration.
Identify which drivers are more likely to resist change. Provide training if necessary; gradually phase in digital fuel payments alongside traditional ones for some time.
It depends. Custom solutions are usually more suitable if off-the-shelf platforms lack coverage or can’t be integrated with all the existing enterprise software.