Receipt Caker

Commerce & logistics

Invoices and receipts for printing companies

Printing companies quote per-run jobs that combine setup, materials, printing and finishing, often taking a deposit before going to press. Each job needs a clear, itemized bill. Receipt Caker lets you build print invoices, quotes and deposit receipts in your browser, with totals calculated automatically, then export a free PNG or a watermark-free PDF with your logo.

How do printing companies invoice clients?
Receipt Caker is a free browser tool printers use to bill print jobs. Add line items for setup, materials, printing, finishing and delivery, each with quantity and unit price, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically. Include the job or proof reference and any deposit taken, preview it live, then export a free PNG or a watermark-free PDF with your logo to send to the client.

Documents printing companies issue

Print job invoice

The bill for a completed run, itemizing setup, stock, printing, finishing and delivery on one document.

Print quote

A priced estimate for a job so the client can approve the cost before the press is booked.

Deposit receipt

Confirmation of an upfront payment taken to schedule a job, recording the amount and the balance due.

Proof approval invoice

A charge for producing physical proofs or samples before the client signs off the full run.

Why printing companies use Receipt Caker

  • Itemize setup, stock, printing and finishing so clients see exactly what each stage costs.
  • Send priced quotes first, then turn the approved job into a matching invoice.
  • Take deposits on larger runs and show the balance clearly on the final bill.
  • Reference job and proof numbers so every document ties back to the same order.
  • Export free PNG images or watermark-free PDFs carrying your print-shop branding.

How the billing workflow works

  1. 1

    Add the client and job

    Enter your print business, the client and the job or proof reference for the run.

  2. 2

    List each stage

    Add setup, stock, printing, finishing and delivery as line items; totals build automatically.

  3. 3

    Apply tax and deposit

    Set the tax rate and note any deposit taken so the balance due is clear.

  4. 4

    Export and send

    Download a free PNG or watermark-free PDF and send it to the client yourself.

Pricing a job by its stages

A print job is rarely a single price. There is setup or plate work, the stock itself, the print run and often finishing such as lamination, folding or binding. Clients like to see these stages separated so they understand where the cost comes from.

Receipt Caker lets you list each stage as its own line item with a quantity and unit price, and the totals build automatically. A client comparing your invoice to your quote can see the job was billed exactly as agreed, which builds trust and reduces queries.

From quote to invoice

Most print work starts with a quote. The client approves a price, the job goes to press, and the final invoice should match what was agreed. Keeping the two documents consistent avoids awkward conversations at payment time.

You can build the quote first in Receipt Caker, then produce a matching invoice once the job is done, reusing the same line structure. Referencing the job number on both keeps everything tied together for you and the client.

Deposits and proofs

Larger runs often need a deposit before the press is booked, and clients may pay for physical proofs before signing off. Both are chargeable moments that deserve their own paperwork.

Issue a deposit receipt when the upfront payment lands, and a proof invoice if you produce samples. On the final invoice, note the deposit already received so only the balance shows as outstanding, giving the client a clear picture of what is left to pay.

Frequently asked questions

How do I itemize a print job on the invoice?
List each stage of the job as its own line item in Receipt Caker. A typical print invoice might have separate lines for setup or plates, the paper stock, the print run priced per unit, finishing such as lamination or binding, and delivery. Each line has a description, quantity and unit price, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically as you build the document. This stage-by-stage breakdown lets the client see exactly where the cost comes from and compare the invoice to the quote you sent. The tool does not store your price list, so you enter the agreed figures for each job. Presenting a clear, itemized bill reduces questions from clients and makes it obvious that the job was charged as agreed, which speeds up approval and payment.
Can I take a deposit before starting a run?
Yes. For larger runs it is common to take a deposit before booking press time, and Receipt Caker lets you issue a deposit receipt recording the amount and date. When the job is finished, you build the final invoice listing all the charges so the total reflects the complete job, then add a line noting the deposit already received and show the remaining balance due. Because you control every line, you can present the deposit as a deduction or a clearly labelled balance, whichever suits your client. The tool calculates totals but does not link the two documents automatically, so reference the deposit receipt on the invoice to keep the trail clear. This gives the client a transparent record of what they paid upfront and what remains once the run is delivered.
Do I need to charge for proofs separately?
That is up to your pricing, and Receipt Caker supports either approach. If you produce physical proofs or samples before the full run, you can bill them as a separate proof invoice or add a proof line to the main job invoice. Each option itemizes clearly with its own description and price, and the totals calculate automatically. Some printers include proofs in the job price and simply note them as a zero-charge line for transparency, while others bill them to cover the cost of stock and press time. The tool does not decide this for you; you enter the lines that reflect your quote. Referencing the proof number on the document keeps it tied to the wider job, so when the client reviews their paperwork every charge maps clearly back to a stage they approved.

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