What an invoice needs to do
An invoice records a sale, tells the customer what they owe, and gives both sides a document for accounting and tax. Clarity matters more than decoration: the faster someone understands the amount and due date, the faster you get paid.
Follow these steps
- Add your business details. Legal name, address, contact info, and any tax registration number required where you operate.
- Add the customer. Their name and address, plus a purchase-order reference if they gave you one.
- Give it a unique number. Use a sequential scheme so no two invoices share an ID and none are skipped.
- Set the dates. Include the issue date and a clear due date, not just "net 30".
- List line items. Description, quantity, unit price, and line total for each product or service.
- Apply taxes. Show the tax rate and amount separately. Rates and rules vary by country, so use the ones that apply to you.
- Total it up. Subtotal, tax, any discount, then the grand total due.
- State payment terms. Accepted methods, bank or wallet details, and any late-payment note.
Sending and following up
Send the invoice as a PDF or a link the moment work is delivered; speed correlates with payment. Keep a copy for your records and a simple way to mark it paid.
A mobile invoicing tool such as Invoice Max Pro can auto-fill your details, number invoices for you, calculate tax, and send them on the spot, even offline, turning a ten-minute chore into a few taps.