Snap a photo of your bill on WhatsApp. OverAir's AI reads the amount, the due date, and reminds you when it matters.
The least obvious and most useful feature in OverAir — send a photo of any bill on WhatsApp and the AI builds the reminder for you, with amount, due date and category. Zero typing.
Picture what happens every time a bill arrives:
It lands in your inbox (or on paper). You open it, see the amount, think "I'll pay this near the due date", and close it. Four days pass, you forget the amount, forget the date, and when you finally remember — it's already past due. Late fee. Interest. That little tightness in your chest.
Or: you snap a photo of the bill, drop it in WhatsApp's "Message Yourself" chat, and it sits there in a timeline with 500 other messages. Two weeks later, you try to find that photo. Good luck.
OverAir solves this in a way that feels almost magical the first time: you send a photo of any bill — electricity, water, internet, rent, credit card — and the AI reads it. It extracts the provider name, the amount, the due date, and creates a reminder automatically. You don't type anything. You don't pick a category. You just send the photo.
How it works — no magic, just AI
WhatsApp has 139.3 million users in Brazil alone (Backlinko, 2026), and 98% of smartphone owners with the app open it every single day. Average time spent: 33 to 38 minutes per day. WhatsApp isn't "just an app" anymore — it's communication infrastructure. So it makes sense it can also be organization infrastructure.
When you send a photo to OverAir, here's what happens behind the scenes:
- Google's AI (Gemini) "looks" at the photo — it's not generic OCR; it's a multimodal model that understands context. It recognizes that the image is an invoice, identifies the company logo, reads printed amounts, parses due dates in any format.
- Extracts structured fields — payee name, amount, due date, category.
- Creates a reminder for the due date — not the day you sent the photo, the actual date printed on the bill.
- Confirms back on WhatsApp: "Got it: pay DEWA — AED 412 — due May 25. I'll remind you in the morning."
Done. 5 seconds. Your hands didn't type. Your brain didn't categorize anything.
Real cases from real life
The electricity bill that always slips
You snap a photo. OverAir reads: DEWA — AED 412 — due 05/25. On May 25 at 8am: "Today: DEWA AED 412". You pay, send "paid the electricity", marked done. No more "I forgot".
Monthly rent (recurring)
You send a photo of the rent invoice. The AI notices it's monthly (the invoice says "monthly fee" or shows the period "May 2026"). You reply "it's the 5th every month" and it turns the reminder into a recurring one. Next month, the month after, the month after that — without you doing a thing again.
Bills in another currency (for expats juggling Dubai, London, São Paulo)
It doesn't matter if the bill is in AED, GBP, EUR, USD or BRL. The AI reads the symbol, saves the amount in the correct currency. When you send /expenses at the end of the month, it's broken down by currency too. Important if you live abroad or earn in more than one currency.
Credit card statements with multiple dates
Some statements show both a "due date" and a "closing date". The AI tells them apart: the reminder fires on the due date, not the closing date. Sounds like a small detail — until you're the one who reminded yourself on the wrong day.
Several bills at once
You open your mail and find 4 bills. You snap 4 photos. Send all 4 on WhatsApp. The AI processes all 4 — each becomes its own reminder with its own due date. You just organized your entire month in 30 seconds.
What changes at the end of the month
Send /expenses on WhatsApp and you get:
May so far:
🏠 Rent — AED 4,500 (paid)
⚡ DEWA — AED 412 (paid)
🌐 Etisalat — AED 389 (due May 28)
💳 Credit card — AED 2,140 (due May 30)
🚗 Salik — AED 120 (paid)
Total upcoming: AED 2,529
This isn't a generic bank statement. It's what you consciously recorded, with readable names, grouped by category. Useful for budgeting with your partner, for understanding rent vs. internet, for planning the next month.
"But what about privacy?"
Fair question. The photo travels from your WhatsApp to OverAir (encrypted in transit). Google's AI processes the image and returns the structured fields (amount, date, payee). The photo isn't stored after processing — only the extracted data. And that data is yours: it stays in your account, you can delete it from the app or by sending /delete.
It's not zero-knowledge (the AI needs to see the bill to read it), but it's as private as any document-processing assistant. And it's far more private than dropping the photo in a family group chat and "hoping you remember".
The whole thing is about removing friction
Think about your current flow for paying a bill:
- Bill arrives.
- You open your bank app.
- You find "schedule payment".
- You type the amount.
- You set the date.
- You confirm.
5 to 8 screens. 1 to 2 minutes per bill. Plus double-checking later.
With OverAir:
- Snap a photo.
- Done.
The AI handles the rest. When friction drops to zero, the habit sticks — because you don't need "discipline" to register a bill. You just snap the photo, which is the gesture you'd already make anyway.
Try it once
Send a "hi" to OverAir on WhatsApp and snap the next bill that lands on your desk — electricity, credit card, rent, water, any of them. In seconds the AI returns a ready-made reminder. If it gets something wrong (rarely, but it happens), you reply with the correction ("the amount is 412.30, not 412") and it adjusts on the spot.
Bills paid on time. A lighter head. No new app. No typing.
Want to organize your life with AI?
OverAir turns WhatsApp audio, text and images into organized reminders, finances and notes. Start free in 10 seconds.
Start on WhatsApp →