Retail & shops
Retail Receipt Generator
A retail receipt is the itemized proof of sale a shop hands a customer at checkout. Receipt Caker's retail generator recreates a standard point-of-sale printout — store header, per-line products with quantities and unit prices, a subtotal, sales tax calculated from your rate, the grand total and the tender method — so designers, developers and shop owners can produce clean, accurate samples in seconds.
- How do I make a retail receipt?
- Receipt Caker generates a retail receipt in three steps: enter your store details and line items, pick a paper width and font, then export as PNG (free) or PDF (Pro). Sales tax and totals are calculated automatically from the rate you set.
| Item | Qty | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Ceramic mug, glazed | 2 | $24.00 |
| Beeswax candle 8oz | 1 | $18.50 |
| Cotton tote bag | 1 | $9.95 |
Free exports include a small watermark. Go Pro to remove it.
What this receipt contains
- Store name, address and phone in the header block
- One line per product with quantity × unit price
- Subtotal, itemized sales tax, and grand total
- Payment method (card, cash, mobile) and change due
- Receipt number, cashier ID, and date/time stamp
- Optional barcode or QR for return lookups
Fields that matter
- Seller identity and address (required on most retail receipts)
- Sales tax shown as a separate line where the jurisdiction requires it
- Transaction date and a unique receipt/transaction number
Who uses it
Independent shop owners producing duplicate receipts, UX designers mocking up checkout flows, QA engineers testing returns and refunds against realistic data, and bookkeepers reconstructing a lost proof of purchase for expense records.
What belongs on a point-of-sale retail receipt
A retail receipt is built from a fixed set of blocks: a header that names the shop with its address and phone, one line per product showing quantity times unit price, a subtotal, a sales-tax line, the grand total, and the tender method with any change due. Below that sit a receipt number, the cashier initials and a date-and-time stamp so a return can be looked up later.
The order of these blocks is not arbitrary. Everything above the subtotal is what the customer bought; everything below it explains how the amount owed was reached. Keeping tax on its own line rather than folding it into shelf prices is what most jurisdictions expect, and it is what lets a buyer confirm the printout reconciles against the goods listed above.
How the subtotal, tax and total are calculated
The subtotal is simply the sum of every line total, where each line total is quantity multiplied by unit price. Two glazed mugs at $12.00 contribute $24.00, and so on down the list. The tax line is the subtotal multiplied by the rate you set — 8.25% on a $52.45 basket adds $4.33 — and the grand total is subtotal plus tax.
Receipt Caker performs this arithmetic live as you type, so the numbers always agree with the items above them. If you are unsure which combined state-and-local rate applies, the sales-tax calculator lists rates you can copy straight into the builder, and changing the rate re-renders the preview without disturbing any line item you have already entered.
Common uses for a generated retail receipt
Designers use the retail template to populate checkout mockups with believable line items instead of lorem-ipsum placeholders. QA engineers feed it into return and refund flows to see how a real transaction number and tax split behave. Bookkeepers reissue a duplicate for a genuine sale whose paper copy faded or was lost, so an expense record stays complete.
In every case the receipt describes a real or clearly hypothetical transaction. Receipt Caker produces generic documents only — it should never be used to imitate a specific store's branding or to invent a purchase that did not happen. Used honestly, it is a fast way to turn a handful of product lines into a clean, printable proof of sale.
Building your retail receipt in Receipt Caker
Start by entering the store name, address and phone in the header, then add each product as a line with its quantity and price. Set the tax rate, choose an 80mm paper width with a monospace font for the classic thermal look, and switch on the barcode if you want a return-lookup code. The preview updates with every keystroke.
When the receipt reads correctly, export it. The free plan produces a PNG with a small watermark; Pro removes the watermark, unlocks high-resolution PDF, lets you drop in your own logo and opens the bulk API. Everything runs in your browser, so nothing you type is sent anywhere or stored — Receipt Caker only renders the image you download.