Invoice types
Credit Note Generator
A credit note is a document that reduces or reverses an amount from a previously issued invoice, correcting an overcharge, a return or a cancelled item without deleting the original record.
- How do I write a credit note?
- In Receipt Caker, reference the original invoice number, list the items or amount being credited, show the credit total, and label the document a credit note before exporting. It runs in your browser with no signup.
- What is a credit note?
- A credit note is issued by a seller to reduce or cancel value from an earlier invoice, for example after a return, an overcharge or a discount. It records the reduction while leaving the original invoice intact as part of the audit trail.
What to include on a credit note
What you can do
- Reference the original invoice on the credit note
- Itemise the amounts being credited back
- Automatic totals for the credited value and tax
- Live preview so the credit reads clearly
- Free watermarked PNG export from the browser
- Pro unlocks watermark-free PDF plus your logo
What a credit note is
A credit note is a document a seller issues to reduce the amount a customer owes on a previous invoice. Rather than editing or deleting the original bill, the credit note records the reduction separately, keeping a clean trail of what changed and why.
It effectively acknowledges that some or all of an earlier invoice should not stand, whether because goods were returned, an item was overcharged, or a discount was agreed after the fact. The original invoice and the credit note together tell the full story.
When to issue one
You issue a credit note when a customer returns goods, when you have overcharged, when a service falls short of what was billed, or when you grant a post-invoice discount. It is the correct way to adjust a bill without erasing the record of the original transaction.
A credit note is essentially the opposite of an invoice: an invoice adds to what a customer owes, while a credit note subtracts from it. This makes it a debit note's counterpart, which is used when a further amount needs to be charged instead.
What to include
Label the document plainly as a credit note and give it its own unique number. Reference the original invoice number and date so the two documents link, and list the specific items or the reason and amount being credited.
Show the credited subtotal, reverse any tax that applied, and state the total credit clearly. A short note explaining the reason, such as a return or a corrected charge, helps both parties and anyone reviewing the books later understand the adjustment.
Building one in Receipt Caker
Enter your business and customer details, title the document a credit note, and note the original invoice it relates to. Add lines for the items or amount being credited and let the generator total the credit, including any tax reversed.
Review the live preview so the reduction reads clearly, then export a free watermarked PNG or a Pro PDF with your logo. Receipt Caker creates the credit note document only; it does not refund money, adjust a payment, or update any accounting ledger for you.