Receipt Caker

Creative & digital

Invoices and Receipts for Freelance Designers

Freelance designers juggle deposits, milestone payments and final delivery fees across several clients at once. A tidy, itemized invoice shows exactly what a client is paying for, from initial concepts to source files. Receipt Caker lets you build that document in your browser and export it as a professional image or PDF.

How do freelance designers invoice clients?
Receipt Caker lets freelance designers build a professional invoice in the browser without signing up. Add your studio details, list each line such as logo concepts, revision rounds and final source files, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically. A live preview shows the finished document, then you export a free PNG or a watermark-free PDF with your own logo to send to the client yourself.

Documents freelance designers issue

Project deposit invoice

A request for the upfront percentage that secures a design project and reserves your time before concept work begins.

Milestone invoice

Bills a stage of the project, such as approved concepts or a completed revision round, so payment tracks with progress.

Final delivery invoice

Covers the remaining balance and any extras before source files, exports and usage rights are handed over.

Paid receipt

Confirms a payment has been received and gives the client a clean record for their own bookkeeping.

Why freelance designers use Receipt Caker

  • Itemize concepts, revision rounds and file handoffs so clients see exactly what they paid for.
  • Automatic subtotal, tax and total math means no manual arithmetic on every quote.
  • Live browser preview lets you check spelling and figures before anything leaves your desk.
  • Free PNG export for quick jobs, or a watermark-free PDF with your logo on Pro.
  • No signup and client-side rendering keep your client list and rates private.

How the billing workflow works

  1. 1

    Add your details

    Enter your studio name, contact information and the client you are billing at the top of the invoice.

  2. 2

    List the work

    Add a line for each deliverable, such as brand concepts, extra revisions or packaged source files, with quantities and rates.

  3. 3

    Confirm the totals

    Watch the subtotal, tax and grand total update automatically in the live preview as you edit line items.

  4. 4

    Export and send

    Download a free PNG or a Pro PDF with your logo, then email it to the client from your own account.

Why itemized invoices matter for design work

Design is easy to undervalue when it arrives as a single lump sum. Breaking a project into concept work, revision rounds and final delivery shows clients the effort behind each figure and reduces awkward questions when the bill lands.

An itemized invoice also protects you. If a client asks for a fourth round of changes when the quote covered two, a clearly listed line item makes the extra charge obvious and fair rather than a surprise.

Receipt Caker keeps every line visible in a live preview, so you can adjust wording and rates until the document reads the way you want before you export it.

Deposits, milestones and final balances

Most freelance designers ask for a deposit before starting, then bill again at agreed milestones. Separate invoices for each stage keep cash flowing and make it clear which portion of the project a payment covers.

When you send the final delivery invoice, it can reference the deposit already paid so the client sees the remaining balance rather than the full figure again. Clear running totals prevent double-payment confusion.

Because each document is built fresh in the browser, you can copy the structure of a previous invoice and adjust the numbers for the current stage in a couple of minutes.

Keeping your records clean

Once a client pays, a simple receipt confirms the money arrived and gives both sides a matching record. That paper trail is invaluable at tax time and when a client queries a payment months later.

Receipt Caker renders everything on your own device, so your rate card and client names never sit on a third-party server. For freelancers who value privacy, that matters.

Export a PNG for a fast confirmation or a PDF for anything you want to archive, and keep a tidy folder of everything you have billed across the year.

Frequently asked questions

How do I handle a deposit and a final balance on separate invoices?
Send two documents. The first is a deposit invoice for the agreed upfront percentage, for example thirty or fifty percent, issued before you begin concept work. When the project is finished, create a final invoice that lists the full project total, then adds a line subtracting the deposit already paid so the client clearly sees the remaining balance. In Receipt Caker you build both in the browser, and the subtotal and total recalculate automatically as you add or subtract lines. Keeping the two invoices separate gives you a clean record of when each amount was requested and paid, which helps at tax time and if a client ever queries the split later on.
Can I show revision rounds as separate line items?
Yes, and it is a smart way to protect your time. List the revision rounds included in your quote as one line, then add any extra rounds the client requested beyond that as their own charged lines. This makes the boundary between agreed work and additional work obvious, so an extra charge never looks like a surprise. In Receipt Caker each line has its own description, quantity and rate, and the totals update live as you type. Many designers keep a short standard wording for revisions, such as additional revision round beyond the two included, so every invoice reads consistently. Clear line items reduce disputes and set expectations for future projects with the same client.
What should a design invoice include?
A design invoice should carry your business name and contact details, the client name, an invoice number and date, and a due date or payment terms. The body needs a clear line for each deliverable, such as logo concepts, revision rounds, final source files or usage rights, with quantities and rates so the client can follow the math. Finish with a subtotal, any tax, and a grand total, plus your payment details. Receipt Caker prompts for each of these fields and calculates the totals for you as you go. The live preview lets you check spelling and figures before you export a PNG or a watermark-free PDF and send it to the client yourself.

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