How-to guides Β· 7 min read
How to Make an Itemized Receipt
An itemized receipt shows every line, quantity, and tax so nothing is ambiguous. Here is how to build one properly.
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- How do I make an itemized receipt?
- In Receipt Caker, list each product or service on its own line with a description, quantity, and unit price, then show a subtotal, any tax, and the grand total. The tool multiplies quantity by price and adds tax automatically for you, so the totals stay accurate every time.
What makes a receipt 'itemized'
An itemized receipt breaks a purchase into individual lines instead of showing a single lump sum. Each line names one product or service, how many were bought, and the price for each. This detail lets a customer, an accountant, or an expense reviewer see exactly what the money paid for rather than guessing behind one combined figure.
Itemisation matters most when receipts are used for claims, deductions, or reimbursement. A blanket total might satisfy a casual buyer, but an expense policy or a tax filing often needs to see the breakdown. Building the receipt line by line from the start saves you from reconstructing details later.
Setting up your line items
Give every item a short, specific description. 'Consulting, 2 hours' or 'Blue ceramic mug' tells a reader far more than 'services' or 'goods'. Clarity here is what turns a receipt into a genuine record that still makes sense weeks after the sale.
For each line, enter the quantity and the unit price separately so the math is transparent. The line total is simply quantity multiplied by price. Keeping these as distinct columns means anyone can verify the arithmetic at a glance, and it prevents the rounding surprises that come from typing pre-calculated totals by hand.
Subtotal, tax, and the grand total
Once your lines are in place, sum them into a subtotal before tax. Showing the subtotal separately makes the receipt easier to audit because the reader can see the pre-tax figure and the tax figure independently rather than trying to work backwards from one number.
Add sales tax or VAT as its own line, stating the rate applied. A tool that calculates this for you avoids mistakes, especially when different items carry different rates. The grand total then equals the subtotal plus tax, and it should match exactly what the customer paid.
Handling discounts and multiple tax rates
If you apply a discount, show it as a clearly labelled line that reduces the subtotal, rather than quietly lowering an item price. Transparency about discounts keeps the receipt honest and helps both sides understand how the final figure was reached.
Some sales mix taxable and non-taxable items, or goods taxed at different rates. In those cases, group items by rate or flag each line's tax status so the totals remain correct. Receipt Caker handles per-line calculation, so a mixed basket still produces an accurate grand total without manual spreadsheet work.
Reviewing before you send
Before exporting, read every line back. Check that descriptions are clear, quantities are right, and the subtotal, tax, and total agree with the actual payment. A quick review catches transposed digits and missing lines that would otherwise cause confusion when the receipt is used for bookkeeping.
When it all matches, download the itemized receipt as a PDF and keep a copy for your records. A well-structured, itemised document is easier to reconcile at tax time and far more convincing when attached to an expense claim, because every figure on it can be traced back to a specific line.