Restaurant Receipt Maker
A restaurant receipt itemizes a meal — each dish and drink, the subtotal, the tax, and the tip — so it can be reimbursed or filed for bookkeeping. Anyone claiming a business meal or splitting a group bill needs the itemized version, not just the card slip. Receipt Caker's free restaurant receipt maker builds that layout in your browser and exports a clean PNG or PDF.
- How do I make a restaurant receipt?
- Add the restaurant name and date, list each dish or drink with its price, and set the tax and tip. Receipt Caker's live preview totals it into an itemized meal receipt. Export a free PNG or a Pro PDF for your expense claim or records.
Créez votre document dans le générateur de reçus complet, puis exportez-le dans le format souhaité.
Ouvrir le générateur de reçusWhy the itemized meal receipt matters
The slip a server brings back with the card machine shows the total and a tip line, and little else. The itemized receipt — the one printed from the till — lists every dish and drink on its own line before the subtotal, tax, and tip. That difference is the whole reason expense teams ask for the detailed version: the summary proves what was charged, but only the itemized receipt shows what was ordered, which matters when alcohol or other non-claimable items have to be separated out.
Receipt Caker builds the itemized layout, a line per item, so nothing is buried inside a single figure. You list what was actually ordered and the tool totals it, giving you the detailed receipt a claim wants rather than the card slip a finance team will bounce.
Subtotal, tax, and tip kept separate
A meal receipt totals in stages: the dishes make a subtotal, tax applies on top, and the tip goes on its own line. Keeping those three apart is not just tidy — it is what expense policies need, because many reimburse the meal but cap or exclude the gratuity, and tax is often reclaimed separately. The maker takes the subtotal from the items you list, then lets you add the tax rate and the tip as either an amount or a percentage.
Because each part is visible, the total is easy to check against what was paid, and you can adjust one line without redoing the rest. Set the numbers to the real bill and the preview keeps up as you go.
Business meals and split bills
Two situations drive most restaurant receipt requests. The first is the claimed business meal, where finance or a tax rule needs to see the itemized order to confirm it was legitimate and to strip out anything that cannot be claimed. The second is the group bill, where several people need a clear record of what was ordered so the cost can be divided fairly — the receipt splitter picks up from there.
In both cases the point is an accurate record of a meal that really happened. Recreating a lost itemized receipt from what you genuinely ordered is fine; using the tool to claim a meal that never took place is not. Export the finished receipt as a PNG or PDF once the total is right.