Creative & digital
Invoices and Receipts for Interior Designers
Interior designers bill design fees, procured furnishings and site visits, often across a long project with several stages. Clear line items keep the professional fee separate from purchased goods so clients follow the total. Receipt Caker builds each invoice in your browser and adds up every line.
- How do interior designers invoice clients?
- Receipt Caker lets interior designers build itemized invoices in the browser with no signup. Add your studio details, list the design fee, procured furnishings, site visits and any markup, 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 interior designers issue
Bills your professional fee for concepts, plans and specification, often billed by phase or as a flat fee.
Charges for furnishings, fixtures and materials sourced for the project, with any agreed markup shown.
Covers on-site meetings, supervision and installation days billed by visit or by the hour.
Confirms a design fee or procurement payment was received and gives the client a clean record.
Why interior designers use Receipt Caker
- Separate your design fee from procured goods so clients read the invoice clearly.
- Automatic totals handle furnishings, markup, site visits and tax without a spreadsheet.
- Live preview lets you check item lists and figures before you export.
- Free PNG for quick sends, or a branded watermark-free PDF on Pro.
- Client-side rendering keeps client addresses and pricing private.
How the billing workflow works
- 1
Add your studio details
Enter your studio name, contact information and the client, plus the project or room for reference.
- 2
List fees and goods
Add lines for the design fee, procured furnishings, markup and site visits with quantities and rates.
- 3
Confirm totals
Check the subtotal, tax and grand total in the live preview as it recalculates with each edit.
- 4
Export and send
Download a free PNG or a Pro PDF with your logo, then send it to the client yourself.
Design fees by phase
Interior projects run in phases: concept, detailed design, specification and installation. Billing the design fee by phase keeps payments aligned with progress and cash flowing.
Each phase can be its own line or its own invoice, with a short note on what it covers so the client sees the work behind the figure.
Receipt Caker lets you reuse a project's invoice structure across phases, adjusting the figures for each stage in minutes.
Procurement and markup
When you source furnishings and materials, the client needs to see the cost of goods clearly, along with any agreed markup or procurement fee.
Listing each item with a quantity and price, then a separate markup line, keeps the arrangement transparent and matches what you agreed at the outset.
The totals recalculate as you add items, so a large procurement schedule still adds up correctly on the invoice.
Site visits and installation
On-site supervision and installation days are real work that deserves its own line. Billing them by visit or by the hour keeps the professional service distinct from goods.
A clear label, such as installation supervision, tells the client exactly what the charge covers on a given day.
A tidy receipt once they pay gives both sides a matching record, which matters on long projects with many payments.