Receipt Types
Invoice Receipt Maker
Confused about the difference between an invoice and a receipt? Receipt Caker explains both and builds a clean paid-invoice receipt in your browser, with automatic totals and a live preview.
- What is the difference between an invoice and a receipt?
- Receipt Caker is a free online tool that helps with both. An invoice is a request for payment sent before money changes hands: it lists what is owed and when it is due. A receipt is proof that the payment was made, issued after the buyer pays. In short, the invoice asks; the receipt confirms.
- How do I turn a paid invoice into a receipt?
- Once an invoice is paid, copy its line items into a receipt, add the date the payment cleared, mark the balance as paid in full, and note the payment method. Receipt Caker gives you a field for each of these, recalculates the totals, and shows a live preview you can download as a PNG or PDF.
Was Sie tun können
- Convert the line items from a paid invoice into a receipt
- Automatic subtotal, tax, and total calculation
- Mark the balance as paid in full with the payment date
- Record the payment method: cash, card, or check
- Live preview that updates as you type
- Free PNG export, plus watermark-free PDF on Pro
Invoice vs Receipt: What Each One Does
People use the words invoice and receipt as if they mean the same thing, but they sit at opposite ends of a transaction. An invoice is a bill: the seller sends it before payment to say what is owed, how much, and by when. It is a request for money, often carrying a due date and payment terms so the buyer knows the deadline.
A receipt is the follow-up. It is issued after the buyer pays and serves as proof that the money changed hands. Where an invoice asks for payment, a receipt confirms the transaction is settled. Understanding this order — invoice first, receipt second — makes it clear which document you actually need for your records.
Turning a Paid Invoice Into a Receipt
When an invoice is paid, the useful next step is a receipt that documents the payment. Start from the invoice's details: the same seller, buyer, and line items usually carry over unchanged. Then add the piece that makes it a receipt — the date the payment was received, a note that the balance is paid in full, and how it was paid.
Receipt Caker makes this straightforward. Re-enter the items from the paid invoice, set the payment date, and the builder totals everything and applies any tax automatically. The result is a clear paid-invoice receipt that matches the original bill, so your books show both the request for payment and the confirmation that it was settled.
What a Paid Invoice Receipt Should Include
A receipt that documents a paid invoice needs a few key fields to do its job. It should name the seller and, ideally, the buyer, show the date payment was received, and reference the original invoice number so the two records tie together. Below that sits the itemized list, the subtotal, any tax, and the total that was paid.
The most important detail is the paid status: a receipt should make clear that the balance is settled and nothing remains due. Receipt Caker lets you note the amount paid and the payment method on their own lines, so anyone reviewing the document can see at a glance that the invoice was fully satisfied.
When You Need Both Documents
Freelancers and small businesses often issue an invoice to request payment and then a receipt once the client pays, giving both sides a complete paper trail. Buyers keep the receipt for expense reports, warranties, or reimbursement, while sellers keep it as proof the account is clear. Keeping the two documents together removes any doubt about whether a bill was paid.
Receipt Caker focuses on the receipt half of that pair. If you already have a paid invoice, you can reconstruct a matching receipt in a couple of minutes, keep the figures consistent, and download a legible copy for your files or to hand to the other party.
Legitimate Use Only
Receipt Caker is built for lawful, honest purposes: creating a receipt for an invoice that was genuinely paid, replacing a lost receipt for a real purchase, bookkeeping, testing software, and building mockups. Every document it produces is generic and does not copy or imitate the branding or exact layout of any real company.
Using a generated receipt to claim an invoice was paid when it was not, to deceive a buyer, seller, or tax authority, or to commit fraud is illegal and violates our terms of service. Only build receipts that reflect payments that genuinely happened.