A complete invoice includes the sender’s details, the client’s details, a unique invoice number, the issue and due dates, an itemised list with quantities and rates, any tax, the total due, and payment instructions. Miss one of these and you invite questions or delay. The invoice generator has a field for each.
Use the checklist below as a quick audit before you send.
The essentials
- The word “Invoice”. Label the document clearly so there is no doubt what it is.
- Your details. Name or business name, address, contact email or phone, and your logo if you have one.
- Your tax number, if you are registered for VAT, GST or sales tax.
- The client’s details. Name or business name and address, sent to the right person where it is a company.
- A unique invoice number. A running reference such as INV-0001 that is never reused.
- The issue date. The day you raise the invoice.
- The due date or terms. When you expect to be paid, for example “due within 14 days”.
The money
- Line items. One row per item or task, each with a clear description, a quantity, and a rate.
- Subtotal. The sum of the lines before tax.
- Tax. The rate and amount, shown separately, if you charge it.
- Discount, if you have agreed one.
- Total due. The final figure, shown clearly. This is the number your client looks for.
Getting paid
- How to pay. Bank details, a payment link, or accepted methods.
- A reference for the payment, usually the invoice number, so you can match the money to the invoice.
- Notes or terms. Late-payment terms, a thank-you, or anything specific to the job.
A note on descriptions
Vague descriptions are the most common cause of payment delays. “Consulting” invites a query; “Consulting, two strategy sessions, 4,5 June” does not. Spell out what each line covers, and your client can approve it at a glance.
When you have everything on the list, the invoice generator turns it into a clean, professional PDF with no watermark, built entirely in your browser.