Automotive
Auto Repair Receipt Generator
An auto repair receipt separates parts from labor and adds shop supplies and tax. Receipt Caker's mechanic template lists each part with its price, labor at an hourly rate, a shop-fee line and the tax, so vehicle owners and shops get a clear, itemized record.
- How do I make a auto repair receipt?
- Receipt Caker generates a auto repair receipt in seconds: fill in the details, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically. Export a PNG for free or a watermark-free PDF on Pro — no account required.
| Item | Qty | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Front brake pads (set) | 1 | $89.00 |
| Brake rotors | 2 | $124.00 |
| Labor (2.0 hrs @ $110) | 2 | $220.00 |
| Shop supplies | 1 | $12.50 |
Free exports include a small watermark. Go Pro to remove it.
What this receipt contains
- Shop name, address and phone
- Parts, each with quantity and price
- Labor hours × hourly rate
- Shop supplies / disposal fee
- Vehicle make, model and mileage note
Fields that matter
- Shop identity and address
- Parts and labor itemized separately with tax
- Invoice date and a work-order number
Who uses it
Independent mechanics writing up a job, and vehicle owners reconstructing a service record for warranty or resale.
Parts versus labor on a repair invoice
An auto repair receipt keeps parts and labor separate so the customer sees what they are paying for materials versus work. Labor is shown as hours multiplied by an hourly rate — two hours at $110 on one line — while each replacement part, such as brake pads or rotors, sits on its own line with a quantity and unit price. A shop-supplies or disposal fee usually follows.
Receipt Caker's mechanic template treats every one of these as its own line item, applies tax through the rate field and totals everything. This split is not cosmetic: many warranties and insurance reimbursements handle parts and labor differently, so a tidy separation makes the invoice far easier to approve.
Work order, technician and shop-supplies fee
A repair invoice is anchored by a work-order number that ties the paperwork to the job on the shop floor. Alongside it you record the date and, in the header note, the vehicle it belongs to. The shop-supplies fee — a small flat charge for rags, cleaners and consumables — appears as its own line rather than being hidden inside the labor rate.
This structure gives both the shop and the owner an auditable record. The work-order number lets anyone pull the full job history later, and the itemized supplies fee reflects how a real shop presents its costs, so nothing about the total is a mystery to the person paying it.
Vehicle, mileage and the warranty note
Including the vehicle's make, model and current mileage turns a plain receipt into a genuine service record. Put these details — for example a 2019 sedan at 74,210 miles — in the header note so they print near the top. Mileage in particular fixes when the work was done, which is what a future buyer or warranty administrator looks for.
The footer is the place for a warranty statement, such as a twelve-month or twelve-thousand-mile guarantee on parts and labor. Printing it on the customer copy sets clear expectations and mirrors how independent shops document their work, strengthening the receipt as a maintenance record for resale or a claim.
Writing up a repair in Receipt Caker
Add each part and the labor line, include a shop-supplies fee if you charge one, set the tax rate and enter the work-order number. A wide paper width with a courier font suits the denser layout of a shop invoice, and the live preview confirms the parts and labor subtotals before you finish.
Export as a PNG for free or a Pro PDF to file with the vehicle's records. Receipt Caker is for writing up genuine jobs, reissuing a lost invoice or reconstructing a service history — not for inventing repairs. It runs entirely in your browser and keeps no copy of the work order.