Receipt Types
Receipt Sample Maker
Want to see what a proper receipt should look like? Receipt Caker walks you through a sample receipt and lets you build your own in the browser, with automatic totals and a live preview.
- What does a receipt sample look like?
- Receipt Caker is a free online tool that shows and builds receipt samples. A proper sample has the seller's name and address at the top, the date, an itemized list of what was bought with prices, a subtotal, the tax, the total paid, and the payment method. Each part appears in a clear, top-to-bottom order.
- How do I make my own sample receipt?
- Start from the example layout and swap in your own details: the store name, the date, each item with its price, the tax rate, and the payment method. Receipt Caker totals everything for you and shows a live preview, so you can turn a sample into a finished receipt and download it as a PNG or PDF.
Was Sie tun können
- Follow a worked example of every receipt section
- Automatic subtotal, tax, and total calculation
- Swap the sample details for your own transaction
- Add store name, date, items, and payment method
- Live preview that updates as you type
- Free PNG export, plus watermark-free PDF on Pro
What a Proper Receipt Sample Contains
A good receipt sample is easy to read from top to bottom because each part has a fixed place. At the top sits the seller's name and usually an address, which tells you who the receipt is from. Just below comes the date of the sale, and often a receipt or transaction number so the purchase can be traced later if there is a question.
The body of the sample is the itemized list: one line per product or service, each with a description, a quantity, and a price. Underneath the items you find the money summary — the subtotal, any tax on its own line, and the final total. A well-made sample shows all of these, so nothing about the transaction is left to guess.
A Walkthrough of an Example Receipt
Picture a simple example. The header reads a generic shop name and address, followed by a purchase date. Two item lines follow: one product at a set price and a second product with a quantity of two, each priced individually. The template adds them into a subtotal automatically, so the arithmetic is already done.
Below the subtotal, a tax line applies the local rate, and the grand total sits at the bottom in bold. A final line notes that the buyer paid by card. Read together, this sample answers every basic question — who sold it, when, what was bought, how much, and how it was paid — which is exactly what a receipt is meant to do.
Turning the Sample Into Your Own Receipt
A sample is most useful as a starting point. Once you understand the sections, you can replace the example details with your own: change the store name and address, set the real date, and enter the items from your actual transaction with their correct prices. The layout stays consistent, so the finished receipt looks just as clear as the sample.
Receipt Caker handles the math while you focus on accuracy. Enter your tax rate and the payment method, and the builder recalculates the subtotal, tax, and total as you type. When the preview matches your transaction, you download it — the sample has become a real, usable receipt.
Free Samples, Simple Downloads
You can build and download unlimited sample receipts as PNG images for free, with no account required. That is plenty for learning the layout, sketching a quick example, or saving a copy of a real sale for your files.
For frequent use, the Pro plan removes the small watermark, unlocks pixel-perfect PDF export, and adds logo uploads. PDF is the better format when you want a set of receipts to look consistent and print sharply, whether for records or for testing.
Legitimate Use Only
Receipt Caker's samples are meant for legitimate purposes: learning what a receipt should contain, replacing a lost receipt for a real purchase, bookkeeping, testing point-of-sale software, and building design mockups. Every sample it produces is generic and does not imitate the branding or exact layout of any real company.
Using a sample receipt to fabricate a purchase, support a false claim, or deceive someone is illegal and violates our terms of service. A sample is a template to learn from and adapt, not a tool for inventing transactions that never happened.