Receipt Caker

Creative & digital

Invoices and Receipts for Event Planners

Event planners bill planning fees, vendor coordination and on-the-day management, often with a deposit to secure the date. Clear line items keep your fee separate from any pass-through vendor costs. Receipt Caker builds each invoice in your browser with automatic totals.

How do event planners invoice clients?
Receipt Caker lets event planners build itemized invoices in the browser with no signup. Add your business details, list the deposit, planning fee, vendor coordination and on-the-day management, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically. A live preview shows the finished invoice as you work, then you export a free PNG or a watermark-free PDF with your own logo and send it to the client yourself.

Documents event planners issue

Booking deposit invoice

Requests the retainer that secures the event date and reserves your planning time in advance.

Planning fee invoice

Bills your professional fee for design, timelines and vendor sourcing across the run-up to the event.

On-the-day management invoice

Covers coordination on the event day itself, including setup oversight, timing and staff supervision.

Payment receipt

Confirms a deposit or fee payment was received and gives the client a clean record for their files.

Why event planners use Receipt Caker

  • Separate your planning fee from vendor pass-through so clients read the invoice clearly.
  • Automatic totals handle deposits, coordination fees and tax without a spreadsheet.
  • Live preview lets you check the event date and figures before you export.
  • Free PNG for quick deposit confirmations, or a branded PDF on Pro.
  • Client-side rendering keeps client and vendor details private.

How the billing workflow works

  1. 1

    Add your details

    Enter your business name, contact information and the client, plus the event date for reference.

  2. 2

    List fees and services

    Add lines for the deposit, planning fee, coordination and on-the-day management with rates.

  3. 3

    Confirm totals

    Check the subtotal, tax and grand total in the live preview as it updates with each line.

  4. 4

    Export and send

    Download a free PNG or a Pro PDF with your logo, then send it to the client yourself.

Deposits that secure the date

A booking deposit protects your calendar and confirms the client is committed. A clear deposit invoice states what the retainer covers and whether it applies to the final balance.

Because events are planned far ahead, a documented deposit is important if plans change later. It sets expectations from the start.

Receipt Caker lets you issue the deposit invoice fast, then reference it on the final invoice so the client sees the remaining balance.

Your fee versus vendor costs

Event budgets involve many vendors. Keeping your planning fee clearly separate from any pass-through vendor costs prevents confusion about what the client is paying you versus paying suppliers.

If you do pass through vendor costs, a distinct labeled line keeps it transparent and easy for the client to reconcile against supplier invoices.

The totals recalculate as you add lines, so even a complex event invoice adds up correctly.

On-the-day management

The event day itself is intensive work: setup oversight, timing and staff supervision. Billing it as its own line shows the client the value of having you there.

A clear label distinguishes the day-of coordination from the planning that led up to it, so the client sees the full scope of your service.

A tidy receipt once they pay closes out the project with a clean record for both sides.

Frequently asked questions

How do I apply an event deposit to the final invoice?
Issue a booking deposit invoice first for the retainer that secures the date, and keep it as a record of what was paid and when. As the event approaches, create a final invoice that lists your full planning fee, on-the-day management and any other charges, then add a line that subtracts the deposit already paid. The client then sees the true remaining balance rather than the full figure again. In Receipt Caker the subtotal and grand total recalculate automatically as you add the deposit-deduction line, so the math stays correct. This two-document approach gives you a clean trail of the retainer and the balance, which is useful for your own records on events planned months in advance and reassuring for clients who want to confirm exactly what they still owe before the day.
Should vendor costs go on my invoice?
It depends on how you structure your business. Many planners bill only their own fee and have clients pay vendors directly, which keeps invoices simple and avoids tax complications on money that is not really your revenue. If you do pass through vendor costs, show them as clearly labeled separate lines, for example florist pass-through, so the client can reconcile each against the supplier's own invoice. In Receipt Caker you can list these distinctly from your planning and management fees, and the totals calculate automatically with any tax applied. The key is transparency: the client should always be able to see which part of the total is your professional service and which part is supplier cost. Clear separation also makes your own bookkeeping easier when you review revenue at year end.
What should an event planning invoice include?
An event planning invoice should carry your business name and contact details, the client name, an invoice number, the issue date, the event date for reference and payment terms. In the body, list the deposit, planning fee, vendor coordination and on-the-day management as separate lines with clear descriptions, quantities and rates so the client can follow each figure. Finish with a subtotal, any tax, a grand total and your payment details. Receipt Caker prompts for each field and calculates the totals automatically while showing a live preview, so you can confirm the event date and figures before sending. Once the invoice looks right, export a free PNG for a quick deposit confirmation or a watermark-free PDF with your logo for your archive, then send it to the client yourself.

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