Automotive
Oil Change Receipt Generator
An oil change receipt records a routine lube service: the oil type and quantity, the new filter, labor, any shop fee, and the vehicle's mileage at the time of service. Receipt Caker's oil change template itemizes each of these so drivers can keep an accurate maintenance history and fleets can log routine servicing.
- How do I make a oil change receipt?
- Receipt Caker generates a oil change receipt in seconds: fill in the details, and the subtotal, tax and total calculate automatically. Export a PNG for free or a watermark-free PDF on Pro — no account required.
| Item | Qty | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Full synthetic 5W-30 (5 qt) | 5 | $36.00 |
| Oil filter | 1 | $11.50 |
| Labor — lube, oil & filter | 1 | $24.00 |
| Shop supplies & disposal | 1 | $4.50 |
Free exports include a small watermark. Go Pro to remove it.
What this receipt contains
- Shop name, address and phone
- Oil grade and number of quarts
- Oil filter and any add-on fluids
- Labor and shop-supply fee
- Vehicle mileage and next-service reminder
Fields that matter
- Shop identity and address
- Parts and labor itemized separately with tax
- Service date, mileage and an invoice number
Who uses it
Quick-lube shops writing up a routine service, and drivers building a maintenance record for warranty or resale.
What an oil change receipt should include
A useful oil change receipt lists the oil grade and how many quarts were used, the type of new filter, the labor charge and the vehicle's mileage at the time of service, followed by the tax and total. Any add-on fluids or a shop-supplies and disposal fee appear as their own lines.
The mileage matters most. A maintenance history is only credible when each service is tied to an odometer reading, so a future buyer or warranty administrator can see the car was serviced on schedule. Receipt Caker puts the mileage in the header note and itemizes the oil, filter and labor separately, so the receipt doubles as a genuine service record.
Why oil type and mileage belong on the slip
The oil grade — for example a full synthetic 5W-30 — tells the next mechanic what the engine was last filled with, and the mileage fixes the service in the vehicle's history. Together with the date, that pairing is what many manufacturers' warranties require as proof that oil changes happened at the recommended intervals.
Put the grade on its own line item and the odometer reading in the header note, and the finished receipt satisfies both a bookkeeper and a warranty reviewer. Without those two details, an oil-change slip is just a sales record; with them, it becomes part of a documented maintenance chain.
Adding a next-service reminder
The footer note is the natural place for a next-service reminder — a target date or the mileage at which the next change is due, such as at 46,880 miles or the following October. Many quick-lube shops print exactly this on the customer's copy and on a windshield sticker.
Adding it makes the receipt more useful to the driver and reflects how a real service printout reads. Edit the footer note, enter your reminder, and it prints beneath the totals in the live preview before you export the receipt.
Writing an oil change up in Receipt Caker
Add the oil (quarts times price), the filter, the labor line and any shop-supplies fee, set the tax rate and record the vehicle and mileage in the header note. A courier font on an 80mm width suits the service-slip layout, and the preview confirms the total.
Export as a PNG for free or a Pro PDF to file with the car's records. Receipt Caker is for documenting a real service or reconstructing a maintenance history — not for fabricating one — and it generates the receipt client-side without storing it.