How-to guides Β· 6 min read
How to Email a Receipt to a Customer
Emailing a receipt is fast and paperless, but format and wording matter. Here is how to send one professionally.
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- How do I email a receipt to a customer?
- Generate the receipt in Receipt Caker and export it as a PDF, then write a clear subject line naming the purchase and a short, polite message with the key details in the body. Attach the PDF and send it so the customer can open, print, and keep a clean copy on any device.
Why email is the paperless default
Emailing receipts is fast, free, and paperless. The customer gets an instant, searchable copy they can store without cluttering a wallet, and you keep a timestamped record in your sent folder. For online sales and remote services, email is often the only practical way to deliver proof of purchase.
A well-sent receipt also reflects on your professionalism. A tidy PDF with a clear message tells the customer their transaction was handled properly, which builds confidence. The small effort of formatting the email well pays off in fewer follow-up questions and a smoother customer experience.
Choose the right format: PDF wins
Attach the receipt as a PDF rather than pasting a photo or a screenshot. A PDF keeps the layout fixed, opens cleanly on any device, and prints correctly if the customer needs a hard copy. Photos can be cropped or compressed by different email apps, so they are a less reliable way to deliver an official document.
Generating the receipt digitally and exporting straight to PDF produces the sharpest file, with selectable text and no camera glare. Receipt Caker lets you build the receipt and download the PDF in one flow, so the attachment you send looks professional every time.
Write a clear subject line
The subject line decides whether the customer can find the receipt again in six months. Make it specific: include the word 'receipt', your business name, and ideally the date or an order reference. A vague subject like a single greeting gets lost, while a descriptive one is instantly searchable.
Consistency helps too. If you always use the same subject pattern, customers learn to recognise your receipts at a glance, and their own inbox searches turn them up reliably. A predictable, informative subject line is a small courtesy with a big payoff for record-keeping.
Keep the message short and useful
In the body, thank the customer briefly and restate the essentials: what they bought, the amount, and the date. Repeating the key figures in plain text means the customer can grasp the details without even opening the attachment, which is handy on a phone.
Avoid a wall of text. A couple of friendly sentences, the core details, and a line inviting them to reply with any questions is plenty. Mention that the full receipt is attached as a PDF so they know where to look. Clear and concise beats long and formal for a routine receipt email.
Send, confirm, and keep a copy
Before sending, double-check the attachment is the right receipt and that the figures match the actual sale. Sending the wrong file or an outdated amount undermines the professionalism the email is meant to convey, and it creates confusion you then have to untangle.
After sending, your sent folder holds a dated copy automatically, but it is wise to also file the PDF in your own records. A consistent archive of emailed receipts makes reconciliation and tax season straightforward, because every genuine sale has a clean, retrievable proof attached to it.