Receipt Caker

Itemized Receipt Maker

An itemized receipt shows every item bought on its own line with its own price, rather than a single lump-sum total. Expense policies, tax audits, and insurance claims routinely demand the itemized version, because the summary slip proves what was charged but not what was purchased. Receipt Caker's free itemized receipt maker lays out a line for each item, totals them with tax, and exports a clean PNG or PDF.

How do I make an itemized receipt?
Add the seller and date, then list each item with its price on its own line. Receipt Caker sums them into a subtotal, applies any tax, and shows the total in the live preview. Export a free PNG or a Pro PDF as the detailed receipt your claim needs.

Build your document in the full receipt generator, then export it in the format you need.

Open the receipt generator

Itemized versus a summary receipt

An itemized receipt lists each product or service separately — a description, a quantity, and a price per line — so the reader sees exactly what made up the total. A summary or card receipt shows only the amount charged. The gap between the two matters whenever someone other than you has to check the purchase: an employer separating claimable items from personal ones, a tax authority verifying a deduction, or an insurer confirming what was lost. Receipt Caker builds the line-by-line version so nothing hides inside a single figure.

That is the reason a finance team hands back the card slip and asks for the detailed receipt from the till. The itemized version answers a question the summary cannot: not just how much, but what for.

Who asks for the detailed receipt

The people who need itemized receipts are the ones whose spending gets reviewed by someone else. Employees filing expenses need them so finance can approve each line against policy. Freelancers and small-business owners keep them so every deduction is backed by a detailed record at tax time. Anyone making an insurance or warranty claim has to show precisely what was bought. In each case a summary total falls short — the reviewer has to see the items.

The maker produces that detailed receipt for real purchases. It handles the common case where a receipt was lost or never itemized properly, letting you rebuild it from what you genuinely bought. It is not a way to invent items or a purchase that did not happen.

Many lines, one accurate total

The strength of an itemized receipt is that it holds as many lines as the purchase had, each with its own description and price, while the tool keeps a running subtotal. Apply a tax rate and you get a total that matches what was paid. Because every item stands on its own, the receipt works for a mixed purchase where some lines are claimable and others are not — the reviewer simply reads down the list.

That flexibility is why the itemized layout underpins so many of the other makers here, from restaurant meals to auto repairs. Set the items and tax to reflect the genuine purchase, check the total, and export the receipt as a PNG or PDF.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a receipt itemized rather than a summary?
An itemized receipt lists each product or service separately, with a description, quantity, and price per line, so the reader can see exactly what made up the total. A summary or card receipt shows only the amount charged. The difference matters whenever someone other than you has to check the purchase: an employer separating claimable items from personal ones, a tax authority verifying a deduction, or an insurer confirming what was lost or replaced. Receipt Caker builds the line-by-line version so nothing is hidden inside a single figure.
Who needs an itemized receipt?
Anyone whose spending gets reviewed by someone else. Employees filing expenses need itemized receipts so finance can approve them against policy. Freelancers and small-business owners keep them so each deduction is backed by a detailed record at tax time. People making an insurance or warranty claim need to show exactly what was bought. In each case a summary total is not enough — the reviewer has to see the items. The maker produces that detailed receipt for real purchases; it is not for inventing items or a purchase that did not happen.
Can I add tax and multiple line items?
Yes, that is the point of it. You add as many item lines as the purchase had, each with its own description and price, and the maker keeps a running subtotal. Then you apply a tax rate to get the total, matching what was actually paid. Because every item is separate, the receipt works for a mixed purchase where some lines are claimable and others are not. Set the items and tax to reflect the genuine purchase, then export the itemized receipt as a PNG or PDF.

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