Receipt Caker

Design & tools Β· 7 min read

58mm vs 80mm receipt width

The practical differences between 58mm and 80mm receipt paper, and how to pick the right width for your job.

Published

Should I use 58mm or 80mm receipt width?
Use 58mm for compact receipts with few items, and 80mm when you need more columns, longer descriptions or a roomier layout. Receipt Caker previews both widths live and adds a wider option too, so you can match the size to your printer or design before exporting a PNG or PDF.

What the numbers actually mean

The 58mm and 80mm figures describe the physical width of the paper roll, measured across. That total includes small unprintable margins on each edge, so the usable print area is a little narrower than the roll itself. The wider the roll, the more characters and columns you can fit on a single line.

These two sizes dominate because they map to the two most common receipt printer classes. Small, portable and budget printers tend to take 58mm rolls, while most countertop point-of-sale printers use 80mm. Knowing your target device is the fastest way to pick a width. Receipt Caker previews at true dimensions so what you see matches what prints.

When 58mm is the right call

Choose 58mm when the receipt is short and simple. Cafes, market stalls, parking machines and mobile card readers all favor the narrow roll because it is cheap, compact and fast. If your receipts rarely exceed a handful of line items, the extra width of 80mm is wasted.

The trade-off is space. Long product names get truncated or wrapped, and fitting more than a couple of numeric columns becomes tight. Design defensively: shorten descriptions, keep to a single price column and let spacing do the work. Receipt Caker's live 58mm preview shows exactly where text will wrap so you can trim before it becomes a problem.

When 80mm earns its keep

Reach for 80mm when receipts carry detail. Restaurants with modifiers, retailers with quantities and discounts, and any business that itemizes tax lines benefit from the extra room. The wider line lets you keep description, quantity, unit price and line total in separate columns without crowding.

The wider format also reads more comfortably. Longer product names stay on one line, headers have room to breathe, and the total sits clearly apart. For most fixed counter setups, 80mm is the sensible default. Receipt Caker lets you switch between widths instantly so you can see whether your content genuinely needs the space.

The wider option for detail and testing

Sometimes even 80mm is not enough, especially for testing or documents that behave more like invoices. A wider layout gives you room for extended notes, multiple tax breakdowns, or side-by-side columns that thermal widths cannot hold. It also helps when a receipt will be read on screen or in a PDF rather than printed on a roll.

Receipt Caker offers a wider option alongside the two thermal standards, which is useful for developers building test fixtures or designers composing detailed mockups. You can generate the same content at multiple widths and compare how the layout adapts, then export whichever version fits the destination.

Designing for whichever width you choose

Width changes your layout budget, so design to it rather than fighting it. On narrow rolls, prioritize the item, the price and the total, and drop anything optional. On wider rolls, spend the extra space on clarity, not clutter; more room is a chance to separate columns, not to add noise.

Whatever you pick, preview at the real size before you commit. A layout that looks fine in a large editor can wrap awkwardly at 58mm. Receipt Caker renders at genuine paper widths in a live preview, so you catch wrapping, truncation and cramped totals early and export a receipt that prints exactly as intended.

Frequently asked questions

How many characters fit on a 58mm receipt?
It depends on the font size, but a common rule of thumb for 58mm thermal paper is roughly 32 characters per line at a standard monospace size, and around 42 at a smaller condensed size. The exact count varies by printer and font because the usable print area is slightly narrower than the 58mm roll after unprintable edge margins. What matters in practice is that space is tight: long product names will wrap or truncate, and fitting more than one or two numeric columns gets difficult. Design defensively by shortening descriptions and keeping a single price column. Receipt Caker previews 58mm at true dimensions, so instead of counting characters by hand you can see exactly where your text wraps and adjust the wording or font before exporting the receipt.
Which receipt width do most point-of-sale printers use?
Most fixed countertop point-of-sale printers use 80mm rolls, while smaller, portable and budget printers, along with many parking and ticket machines, use 58mm. The 80mm width became the counter standard because it gives room for several columns, longer item names and clear tax breakdowns without crowding, which suits retail and restaurant receipts that carry detail. The 58mm width persists wherever compactness, cost and portability matter more than space. The safest approach is to match your generated receipt to the specific printer you will use, since printing an 80mm design on a 58mm roll causes truncation and awkward wrapping. Receipt Caker lets you select either width and preview at true size, so you can confirm your layout fits the target hardware before you send a single receipt to print.
Can I make a receipt wider than 80mm?
Yes. While 58mm and 80mm are the two thermal roll standards, some receipts are read on screen or as PDFs rather than printed on a roll, and those benefit from a wider layout. Extra width gives room for long notes, multiple tax lines, or side-by-side columns that behave more like an invoice than a slip. It is also valuable for testing, letting developers build fixtures with more fields, and for designers composing detailed mockups. Receipt Caker offers a wider option alongside the two thermal widths, so you can generate the same content at several sizes and compare how each layout adapts. Choose the narrow widths when you will print on a physical roll, and the wider format when the destination is a screen, an email attachment or a PDF archive.
Does changing width break my receipt layout?
It can, if you do not preview it. A layout composed at a wide size may look balanced there but wrap or truncate badly when squeezed onto a 58mm roll, because the narrow width leaves far less room for columns and long descriptions. Conversely, a design built for 58mm can look sparse and lost at 80mm or wider. The fix is to design for the specific width you will output and to check the result at true dimensions before committing. Receipt Caker renders at genuine paper widths in a live preview, so when you switch between 58mm, 80mm and the wider option you immediately see how the columns, wrapping and total position respond. That lets you trim wording or adjust font size early, and export a receipt that prints or displays exactly as you intended.

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