One Missing Field Can Cost You Money

You did the work. You delivered it on time. You even followed up politely. But the payment still hasn't arrived — and when you ask why, the client says: "We couldn't find your bank details on the invoice."

Incomplete invoices are one of the most common reasons freelancers and small businesses get paid late. Not because clients are dishonest, but because an invoice missing even one key piece of information creates friction — and friction delays payment.

In this guide, you'll get a complete, field-by-field invoice checklist with real examples for every item. Whether you're sending your first invoice or your five hundredth, bookmark this page. It's the only reference you'll ever need.

Quick Answer

A professional invoice must include: your business details, client details, a unique invoice number, invoice date, due date, line items with descriptions and amounts, applicable taxes, total due, and payment instructions. Optional but recommended: your logo, payment terms, notes, and a signature.

The Complete Invoice Checklist (All Fields Explained)

Below is every element your invoice may need, grouped by category. Items marked Required should appear on every invoice. Items marked Recommended significantly improve professionalism and payment speed. Optional items apply to certain businesses or situations.

🏢
Your Business Details
Who is sending this invoice?
Required
Full Business Name (or Your Legal Name)
This must match your legal trading name. If you're a sole trader, use your full name. If you have a registered business, use the registered name.
e.g. "James Walker Design" or "BrightPath Solutions Ltd"
Business Address
Your full mailing address. For sole traders working from home, a P.O. box or registered address service is a professional alternative.
e.g. "42 Maple Lane, Suite 3, London, UK, EC1A 1BB"
Email Address
Use a professional email, not a personal one. This is how clients will reply or query the invoice.
e.g. "billing@jameswalkerdesign.com"
Phone Number
Optional but highly recommended. Clients who need to query an invoice will reach out faster if they have a phone number.
Website / Social Handle
Adds credibility and reinforces your brand. Useful for service-based freelancers whose portfolio lives online.
e.g. "www.jameswalkerdesign.com"
Tax Registration Number (VAT / GST / ABN)
Legally required if you are VAT-registered (UK/EU), GST-registered (India/Australia), or have an ABN (Australia). Must appear prominently on tax invoices.
e.g. "VAT No: GB123456789" or "GSTIN: 22AAAAA0000A1Z5"
👤
Client / Recipient Details
Who is this invoice being sent to?
Required
Client's Full Name or Company Name
Use the name of the person or business entity you're billing. For businesses, address it to the accounts payable department or the specific contact who commissioned the work.
e.g. "Acme Digital Ltd" or "Ms. Priya Sharma"
Client's Billing Address
Required for formal business invoices and tax invoices. Some companies have a separate billing address from their main office — always confirm this beforehand.
Client's Email Address
Especially important if you're sending the invoice digitally. Some accounting systems use the email to auto-match invoices to payments.
Client's Tax Number (if applicable)
Required on business-to-business tax invoices in many countries. In EU VAT invoices, the client's VAT number must appear if they are VAT-registered.
e.g. "Client VAT No: DE123456789"
🔢
Invoice Identification
Unique references for tracking
Required
Invoice Number
A unique, sequential reference number. It must never be duplicated. Use a consistent format so both you and your client can reference it easily. For tax invoices (VAT/GST), this is a legal requirement.
e.g. "INV-2026-047" or "JWD-0047"
Invoice Date
The date the invoice was created and issued. This is the starting point for calculating the payment due date and for your own accounting records.
e.g. "March 30, 2026" or "30/03/2026"
Payment Due Date
The specific date by which payment must be received. This is the single most important field for ensuring you get paid on time. Always use a specific date, not just a term like "Net 30".
e.g. "Due Date: April 29, 2026" (Net 30 from March 30)
Purchase Order (PO) Number
If your client gave you a PO number before the work began, include it on the invoice. Many corporate accounts payable departments cannot process invoices without a matching PO number.
e.g. "PO Reference: PO-2026-8841"
Project or Contract Reference
Useful for larger projects with multiple invoices. Links this invoice to a specific contract, project name, or engagement letter.
e.g. "Project: Acme Website Redesign — Phase 2"
📦
Services & Line Items
What exactly are you charging for?
Required
Description of Each Service or Product
Be specific. Vague descriptions like "design work" invite disputes. Write exactly what was delivered, any key deliverables, and the time period covered.
e.g. "Brand identity design — logo (3 concepts, 2 revision rounds), brand guidelines PDF, and social media kit — March 1–28, 2026"
Quantity
The number of units, hours, days, or items being charged. Even for project-based pricing, list "1" as the quantity to keep the format consistent.
e.g. "8 hours" or "1 project" or "50 units"
Unit Rate or Price
Your price per unit, hour, or per project. Always show this separately from the total so clients can verify the maths themselves.
e.g. "$150 per hour" or "$2,400 per project"
Line Amount (Qty × Rate)
The calculated total for each individual line item. If you have multiple services, each gets its own line with its own total.
e.g. 8 hrs × $150 = $1,200
Subtotal (Before Tax)
The sum of all line items before any tax or discount is applied. Showing this makes the tax calculation transparent and easy to verify.
🧮
Tax, Discounts & Totals
The numbers that matter most
Required
Tax Amount & Rate (VAT / GST / Sales Tax)
If you are registered for any tax (VAT, GST, sales tax), you must show: the tax rate (%), the taxable amount, and the tax amount in currency. This is a legal requirement in most countries for registered businesses.
e.g. "VAT @ 20%: $240.00" or "GST (CGST 9% + SGST 9%): ₹1,800"
Discount (if applicable)
If you're offering a discount (for a loyal client, early payment, or promotional reason), show it as a separate line item. Never just reduce the total silently — clients notice, and it looks unprofessional.
e.g. "Loyalty discount (10%): -$120.00"
Total Amount Due
The final, unambiguous total — after all taxes, discounts, and adjustments. This should be the largest, most prominent number on the invoice. Include the currency symbol and code.
e.g. "TOTAL DUE: USD $1,440.00"
Currency
Always specify the currency, especially for international clients. Both symbol ($, £, €) and ISO code (USD, GBP, EUR) together removes all ambiguity.
e.g. "GBP £1,200.00" — not just "£1,200"
💳
Payment Details & Instructions
How the client pays you
Recommended
Bank Account Details (for Wire / BACS Transfer)
Include: account name, account number, sort code or routing number, bank name, and SWIFT/BIC code for international transfers. If this is missing, the client cannot pay you by bank transfer — the most common payment method for B2B.
e.g. "Bank: HSBC UK | Account Name: James Walker Design | Account No: 12345678 | Sort Code: 40-47-84"
Alternative Payment Methods
List any other ways you accept payment: PayPal email, UPI ID, payment link (Stripe, Razorpay), or crypto address. More options = faster payment.
e.g. "PayPal: james@jamesdesign.com" or "Stripe: pay.jamesdesign.com/invoice"
Payment Terms
The written statement of your payment expectations. Include the payment term name AND the specific due date to avoid any confusion.
e.g. "Payment due within 14 days. Due date: April 13, 2026."
Late Payment Policy
A brief note on what happens if the invoice is not paid by the due date. Having this in writing — even if you never enforce it — makes clients take due dates more seriously.
e.g. "Invoices unpaid after 30 days will incur a 1.5% monthly late fee."
Optional Elements That Build Trust
These separate amateurs from professionals
Optional
Your Business Logo
The single most impactful visual change you can make to an invoice. A logo makes the document look official, professional, and memorable. Clients trust invoices with branding more than plain text.
Notes / Personal Message
A brief, warm closing note improves client relationships. It's also a good place to reference the work delivered or a specific conversation.
e.g. "Thank you for a great project, Priya! Looking forward to working together again."
Terms & Conditions
A short section covering ownership of deliverables, revision limits, confidentiality, and dispute resolution. For ongoing client relationships, this protects both parties.
Signature
A digital signature adds a personal, legal-feeling touch. Some industries and countries require it. Even when not required, a signature makes the invoice feel more authoritative.
QR Code (Payment Link)
A QR code linking directly to a payment page removes all friction from the payment process. Clients can scan and pay in under 30 seconds.

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What a Complete, Professional Invoice Looks Like

Here's a real-world example. Every field from the checklist is present and properly positioned. Notice how each section flows logically and makes it easy for the client to find the information they need.

James Walker Design
42 Maple Lane, London EC1A 1BB, UK
james@jameswalkerdesign.com · +44 20 7946 0000
VAT No: GB123456789
INVOICE
No: INV-2026-047 ✓ Invoice Number
Date: March 30, 2026 ✓ Issue Date
Due: April 29, 2026 ✓ Due Date

Bill To
Acme Digital Ltd ✓ Client Name
8 Silicon Way, Manchester M1 5NP, UK
accounts@acmedigital.com
VAT No: GB987654321
Project
Website Redesign — Phase 2
PO Number
PO-2026-8841

Description ✓ Line Items Qty Rate Amount
UI/UX design — homepage & 4 inner pages (wireframes + hi-fi mockups) 1 £1,800.00 £1,800.00
Brand asset refresh — updated logo variants & colour palette 1 £600.00 £600.00
Consultation calls (3 × 1 hr sessions) 3 hrs £150.00 £450.00
Subtotal£2,850.00
Loyalty Discount (5%)−£142.50
VAT @ 20%£541.50

TOTAL DUEGBP £3,249.00

Payment Details ✓ Bank Info
Bank: HSBC UK
Account Name: James Walker Design
Account No: 12345678 · Sort Code: 40-47-84
SWIFT: MIDLGB22 · IBAN: GB29 MIDL 4047 8412 3456 78
PayPal: james@jameswalkerdesign.com
Notes ✓ Message
Thank you for a great project! Payment within 30 days is appreciated.
Terms
Late payments incur 1.5%/month fee.

Notice how the sample invoice uses clear labels for every section, shows the discount and tax as separate lines, and includes full bank details. This is exactly what gets invoices paid without a single follow-up email.

Step-by-Step: How to Build Your Invoice

Follow these eight steps in order. Whether you use a Word template, a spreadsheet, or an online tool, the sequence is the same:

1

Add your business details at the top

Your name/business name, address, email, phone, and tax registration number (if applicable) go in the upper-left. This identifies who the invoice is from — the first thing a client looks for.

2

Add the invoice label, number, and dates

The word "INVOICE" should be prominent. Below it (or beside it): invoice number, issue date, and due date. These three fields are the backbone of every invoice filing and payment system.

3

Add the client's details (Bill To section)

Client name, billing address, and email. If they gave you a PO number, add it here too. For tax invoices, include their VAT/GST number in this section.

4

List your services or products as line items

One row per service. Each row needs: description, quantity, unit rate, and line total. Be as specific as possible in the description — this is what the client will refer to when approving the payment.

5

Calculate the subtotal, then apply discounts and tax

Show the subtotal first. Then any discounts (as a negative amount). Then tax on the taxable amount. Then the final total. Each step should be visible and verifiable by the client.

6

Make the total due impossible to miss

Use a larger font size, bold text, or a coloured background for the total due amount. It should be the first number a client's eye goes to when they scan the invoice.

7

Add full payment details

Bank name, account name, account number, sort/routing code, SWIFT/BIC (for international), and any alternative payment options. If this section is incomplete, expect at least one follow-up email before you get paid.

8

Review, then send as PDF

Check every figure, name, and date before sending. Always send as a PDF — never as an editable Word or Excel file. PDFs can't be accidentally altered by the client and look professional on any device.

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Pro Tips from Experienced Invoicers

These aren't textbook tips. They come from real patterns seen in thousands of invoicing situations — the ones that separate professionals who get paid on time from those who don't.

🔄

Use a consistent invoice template

Clients who receive identical-looking invoices every time process them faster. Familiarity breeds efficiency. Pick one template and stick with it.

📧

Reference the invoice in your email subject line

When emailing an invoice, use the subject: "Invoice #INV-2026-047 — [Project Name] — Due April 29". This makes it searchable and immediately identifiable.

Send at the start of the working week

Invoices sent on Monday or Tuesday mornings are opened and processed faster than those sent on Fridays. Accounts payable teams are most active early in the week.

🏦

Confirm bank details before sending to a new client

Invoice fraud (replacing bank details with a fraudster's account) is a real and growing risk. For new client relationships, confirm your bank details by phone before sending the first invoice.

📄

Keep a copy of every invoice you send

File invoices in a folder named by year (e.g., "Invoices 2026"). For tax purposes, you need records for at least 5–7 years depending on your country.

💬

Include a personal thank-you note

A single warm sentence ("Thank you for the project — it was a pleasure working with you") humanises the transaction and makes clients more likely to pay promptly and refer you to others.

💡 The Golden Rule of Invoicing: The clearer your invoice, the faster you get paid. Every field you include removes a question the client would otherwise need to ask you.

Common Invoice Mistakes (That Delay Payment)

These are the most frequent errors we see — and each one has a direct, measurable impact on how quickly you receive payment.

No due date — or a vague one

Writing "payment due upon receipt" or "payable within 30 days" without specifying an actual date is the single biggest invoicing mistake. Always write the specific calendar date: Due: April 29, 2026.

Sending an editable file (Word / Excel)

Editable invoices can be accidentally changed by a client, create version confusion, and look unprofessional. Always convert to PDF before sending.

Reusing the same invoice number

A duplicate invoice number is a bookkeeping nightmare for both you and your client. Their accounting system will flag it, delay processing, and create confusion. Always increment sequentially.

Missing or incomplete bank details

If you don't include your bank account number and sort/routing code, clients who want to pay by bank transfer simply cannot — until they email you for details. That delay is entirely avoidable.

Vague service descriptions

"Design work — $1,500" is an open invitation for the client to question what they're paying for. "Brand identity — 3 logo concepts, 2 revision rounds, delivered March 28" leaves nothing to dispute.

Wrong currency or missing currency symbol

Writing "$1,200" when billing an international client is ambiguous — is that USD, CAD, AUD, or SGD? Always write the full currency: "USD $1,200.00" or "CAD $1,200.00".

Real-World Examples by Business Type

Different business types have different invoicing needs. Here's what each type of professional should pay special attention to:

💻

Freelance Designer / Developer

Key fields: Detailed project description (phases delivered), milestones, revision rounds, and project reference. For international clients, specify currency clearly and include your SWIFT/BIC. If you work on retainer, note the billing period (e.g., "March 1–31, 2026 Retainer").

🇮🇳

GST-Registered Business (India)

Key fields: Your GSTIN, client's GSTIN (for B2B), HSN/SAC code for each line item, CGST/SGST (intra-state) or IGST (inter-state) breakdown with amounts, place of supply, and billing address. All of these are legally required for a valid GST tax invoice.

🇬🇧

VAT-Registered Business (UK / EU)

Key fields: Your VAT registration number, client's VAT number (for B2B within EU), tax point date, VAT rate per line item, VAT amount, and total ex-VAT and inc-VAT. "Full VAT invoices" in the UK require all of these to be legally valid for the client to reclaim VAT.

🧑‍💼

Consultant / Coach

Key fields: Session dates and descriptions (not just "consulting services"), number of hours or sessions, agreed rate, any expenses being passed through (travel, tools), and a clear scope reference tied to your signed proposal or contract.

📸

Photographer / Videographer

Key fields: Event date and location, shoot type (e.g., "Corporate headshots — 4 hours"), deliverables (edited images/video, turnaround time), licensing terms if selling image rights, and usage restrictions. Always retain copyright language if applicable.

🏗️

Contractor / Tradesperson

Key fields: Site address, job description including materials and labour itemised separately, any variations from the original quote, milestone payment references, and Domestic Reverse Charge (for UK subcontractors in the construction industry — a specific VAT rule that applies to CIS-registered businesses).

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Frequently Asked Questions

The questions real users ask before sending their first — or fiftieth — invoice:

What are the most important things to include on an invoice?
The non-negotiables are: your full business name and contact details, client name and billing address, a unique invoice number, invoice date and due date, a detailed description of every service or product with quantities and rates, tax amounts (if registered), total due, and your payment details (bank account or payment link). Without any one of these, the invoice is either incomplete or unprofessional.
Is an invoice number legally required?
For basic invoices, it's not legally mandated in most countries — but it's considered essential professional practice. For tax invoices (VAT in the UK/EU, GST in India/Australia), a unique, sequential invoice number is a legal requirement. Regardless of legality, every invoice should have a number for your own tracking and dispute resolution.
Do I need to include taxes on my invoice?
Only if you're registered to collect tax. If you're VAT-registered (UK/EU), GST-registered (India/Australia), or collect sales tax (USA), you must show the tax rate, taxable amount, and tax figure separately. If you're a small freelancer below the VAT/GST registration threshold in your country, you do not need to charge or show tax — but you should check your local threshold, as crossing it requires immediate registration.
What payment terms should I put on my invoice?
For freelancers and small businesses, Net 7 or Net 14 (payment due within 7 or 14 days) is recommended — especially for new clients. Always write the actual due date alongside the term: "Net 14 — Payment due: April 13, 2026." For long-term, trusted clients, Net 30 is standard. For large projects, consider upfront deposits (30–50%) with the remainder due on delivery.
What is the difference between an invoice and a receipt?
An invoice is a request for payment — it tells the client what they owe and when to pay. A receipt is proof of payment — it confirms money was received. They serve opposite purposes. You issue an invoice before payment; you issue a receipt after payment. Some clients request a receipt once they've paid — always provide one if asked.
Should I include my bank details on every invoice?
Absolutely yes. Bank transfer is the most common payment method for business-to-business invoicing. If your bank details are missing, the client cannot pay you by transfer until they contact you for them — that delay is entirely within your control to prevent. Include account name, number, sort/routing code, and SWIFT/BIC for international transfers on every invoice you send.
Can I create a professional invoice for free?
Yes. OnlineInvoicesMaker.com lets you create a complete invoice with every field from this checklist — logo, line items, tax calculations, payment details, notes, and signature — and download a professional PDF for free. No account, no credit card, no watermarks. The entire process takes under 2 minutes.

Conclusion: A Complete Invoice Is a Paid Invoice

An invoice isn't just an administrative document. It's the final step in a business transaction — and how well you execute it directly affects how quickly and reliably you get paid.

The checklist in this guide covers every field, every category, and every professional detail that goes into a complete invoice. You don't need to include every optional element on every invoice. But you should always include the required fields — and the more recommended elements you add, the fewer follow-up emails you'll ever need to send.

The professionals who get paid fastest aren't just better at their work — they're better at invoicing. Now you have the exact same knowledge they use.

Your next step: Go to OnlineInvoicesMaker.com and build your next invoice using this checklist as your guide. Every required field is already there — just fill in your details and download your PDF. It takes less than 2 minutes.

Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Invoice requirements vary by country, industry, and registration status. If you are registered for VAT, GST, or any other tax, consult a qualified accountant or tax professional to ensure your invoices meet all applicable legal requirements in your jurisdiction.