Free Credit Note Generator — Professional PDF Credit Memos | LazyTools

Free Credit Note Generator

Create professional PDF credit notes instantly — no login, no watermark, no server upload. Add your logo, original invoice reference, reason for credit, unlimited line items with GST/VAT, custom adjustments and 22 currencies. Auto-saved to your browser.

No login · no watermark · free forever Original invoice reference field Reason for credit dropdown 22 currencies · GST/VAT per item

Credit Note Generator Tool

CREDIT NOTE This document reduces or cancels a previously issued invoice. Always reference the original invoice number below.
Click or drag to upload logo
Your business details
CREDIT NOTE
Credit Memo / Credit Invoice
Credit note number
Issue date
Valid until (optional)
Reason for credit
📤 From (seller)
📥 Credit to (customer)
Original invoice number *
Original invoice date *
PO / Reference (optional)
Additional adjustments
Notes & refund instructions
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✦ Features

Everything in this free credit note generator

Built for freelancers, accountants, small businesses and anyone who needs to issue a legally compliant credit note without expensive accounting software. No subscription, no account, no watermark — ever.

Original invoice reference field
Link every credit note to the original invoice with invoice number and date fields. This is a legal requirement in all VAT and GST jurisdictions — the audit trail from credit note to original invoice must be unbroken.
13 reason-for-credit presets
Choose from goods returned, overcharge, post-sale discount, service not delivered, invoice error (pricing or quantity), partial/full cancellation, damaged goods, incorrect GST/VAT rate, prompt payment discount, goodwill credit, or custom reason.
Unlimited line items with per-item GST/VAT
Add unlimited credited items. Each line has its own tax rate — essential when the original invoice contained items at different GST/VAT rates. Per-item discount percentage too. All amounts calculate automatically.
PDF via new tab — zero WordPress interference
Downloads PDF by building a complete standalone page in a new browser tab. No WordPress, no Elementor, no print CSS conflicts — just your professional credit note opening cleanly with an auto print dialog.
22 currencies with correct formatting
USD, EUR, GBP, INR, AED, JPY, AUD, CAD, SGD, SAR, QAR, NOK, SEK and more — each with correct symbol positioning and local formatting conventions.
Auto-saved to browser — no account needed
Every keystroke is saved to your browser's localStorage. Return on the same device and your credit note is exactly where you left it. No cloud account, no login, no setup required.
3 professional templates + colour picker
Modern, Classic and Minimal templates — each with customisable accent colour from 6 presets or a custom hex value. Maintains your brand identity across both invoices and credit notes.
Custom adjustment rows
Add any number of named adjustment rows below line items — for additional deductions, restocking fees, return shipping charges or any custom amount that needs to appear separately in the credit total.
Logo + full business branding
Upload your logo (PNG, JPG or SVG). Business name, address, email, phone and tax registration number appear clearly. The document is clearly marked as a CREDIT NOTE / CREDIT MEMO throughout.
📖 How to use

How to create a credit note — step by step

Set template, colour and currency
Choose Modern, Classic or Minimal. Pick your accent colour and select the currency that matches the original invoice. Using the same currency as the original is a legal requirement in most jurisdictions.
Add your logo and business details
Upload your logo and fill in your business name, address, email, phone and tax registration number (VAT number, GSTIN, ABN or EIN as applicable). Then enter the customer's name and address in the Credit To section.
Set the credit note number and reason
Enter a unique credit note number (CN-001 format, sequential). Choose the reason for credit from the dropdown — this is mandatory for VAT and GST compliance. Set the issue date and optional validity date.
Enter the original invoice reference
Enter the original invoice number and date — this is the most critical field on a credit note. This link is legally required in all VAT and GST jurisdictions and creates the audit trail from the credit note back to the original transaction.
Add the items being credited
Click Add line item and enter the description, quantity, unit rate, tax rate and optional discount for each item being credited. The tax rate should match the rate applied on the original invoice. The credit amount per line calculates automatically.
Add refund instructions and download PDF
Add refund instructions in the Notes field — bank account details, PayPal address, or state that the credit will be applied to the next invoice. Click Download PDF — a new tab opens with your professional credit note. Press Ctrl+P → Save as PDF.
🏆 Why LazyTools

How this credit note generator compares

Most credit note tools are either locked behind accounting software subscriptions, upload your data to servers, or produce generic documents that don't meet VAT/GST requirements. LazyTools generates everything in your browser.

Feature LazyTools ✦ Invoice-Generator.com Zoho Invoice invoiceto.me
Original invoice reference field✔ Yes✔ Yes✔ Yes✘ No
Reason for credit dropdown✔ 13 presets✔ Yes✔ Yes✘ No
Per-item GST / VAT rate✔ YesSingle rate only✔ Yes✘ No
Custom adjustment rows✔ Unlimited✘ NoLimited✘ No
22+ currencies✔ 22 currencies✔ Many✔ ManyLimited
3 professional templates✔ 3 templates✔ Several✔ Several✘ 1 only
Accent colour picker✔ 6 + custom✘ NoLimited✘ No
PDF without watermark (free)✔ Never✔ Yes✔ Yes✔ Yes
No account / login required✔ Yes✔ Yes✘ Account required✔ Yes
Data never uploaded to server✔ Always local✘ Server-based✘ Cloud storage✘ Server-based
Auto-saved to browser✔ localStorage✘ No✔ Cloud (account)✘ No
PDF opens in clean new tab✔ Blob URLServer renderServer renderServer render
📖 Complete guide

The Complete Guide to Credit Notes — What They Are, When to Issue Them and VAT/GST Requirements

A credit note is a legally binding document that a seller issues to a buyer to reduce or cancel part of a previously issued invoice. Unlike simply deleting or editing the original invoice — which is not permitted once issued in most accounting systems — a credit note creates a formal, traceable correction that satisfies both accounting standards and tax authority requirements. Understanding when and how to issue credit notes correctly is essential for any business issuing invoices, particularly those registered for VAT or GST.

What is a credit note and how does it differ from a refund?

A credit note and a refund are two distinct things, though they are often confused. A credit note is a document — it records the obligation to credit the buyer and creates an accounting entry that offsets the original invoice. The actual movement of money (bank transfer, refund to card, or credit applied to a future invoice) is a separate event that settles the obligation recorded in the credit note. Many businesses make the mistake of issuing a refund without a corresponding credit note. In VAT and GST jurisdictions, this is a compliance error — the original invoice still stands in the tax authority's records, and without a credit note, you cannot legally reduce your output tax liability, even if you have already returned the money.

When should you issue a credit note?

Credit notes are appropriate in several business situations. Goods returned by a customer require a credit note that reverses the sale — it must reference the original invoice, specify the items returned, and include the same tax rates applied on the original. Overcharging a customer — through an incorrect rate, wrong quantity, or pricing error — is corrected with a credit note without altering the original document. A post-sale discount agreed after the invoice has been issued is recorded formally through a credit note. Services not delivered as contracted require a credit note for the undelivered portion. An incorrect GST or VAT rate on the original invoice is corrected with a credit note that adjusts the tax amount and allows you to reduce your tax liability accordingly.

Credit note numbering — sequential and separate from invoices

Credit notes must have their own unique sequential numbering sequence, separate from your invoice sequence. Using CN-001, CN-002, or a year-prefixed format like 2025-CN-001 is standard. Tax authorities in the UK, EU, India and Australia all require that credit notes be issued in sequential, non-repeating order. A credit note number should never be the same as any invoice number. The credit note number, along with the date of issue and the original invoice reference, forms the three-part identifier that tax authorities use to link credit adjustments to original transactions during audits.

VAT credit notes — UK and EU requirements

In the UK, under VAT Regulations 1995 and HMRC guidance, a VAT credit note must be issued when you reduce the consideration for a supply — for example when goods are returned, a discount is applied after invoicing, or an invoice error is corrected. The credit note must include your VAT registration number, the original invoice number and date, the reason for the reduction, and the corrected VAT amount. Critically, HMRC guidance states that a supplier can only reduce their output VAT on a return when the customer has actually received value from the credit — either through a cash refund or offset against other outstanding invoices. You must issue a VAT credit note within 45 days of the price reduction in most cases. In the EU, similar rules apply under the EU VAT Directive — member states require credit notes to adjust VAT declarations and maintain the tax audit trail.

GST credit notes — India, Australia and UAE requirements

Under Indian GST, a registered supplier must issue a credit note when there is a reduction in taxable value — for goods returns, invoice corrections, or post-sale discounts. The GST credit note must include the GSTIN of both supplier and recipient, the original invoice number and date, the credit note number (up to 16 characters), taxable value and GST amounts being reversed, and the reason for issue. The credit note must be reported in GSTR-1 for the month in which it is issued and must be issued before 30th September of the following financial year or before filing the annual return, whichever is earlier.

In Australia, GST-registered businesses use adjustment notes (the Australian equivalent of credit notes) for taxable supplies that have been adjusted. The adjustment note must include the ABN of the supplier, the total price of the original supply, and the amount of the adjustment. In the UAE, under Federal Tax Authority guidelines, VAT-registered businesses must issue credit tax invoices for adjustments to original tax invoices, with the credit note referencing the original invoice and specifying the adjusted amounts.

How to record credit notes in your accounts

In the seller's books, issuing a credit note creates a debit to sales returns (or a specific revenue account) and a credit to accounts receivable — reducing the amount the customer owes. If VAT or GST was on the original invoice, the credit note also creates a debit to output VAT (reducing the VAT liability) and a credit to the VAT on sales returns account. In the buyer's books, receiving a credit note creates a debit to accounts payable (reducing what is owed) and a credit to purchase returns. The tax credit is reversed in the input tax account.

Frequently asked questions

A credit note is a legal document issued by a seller to reduce or cancel part of a previously issued invoice. Issue one when a customer returns goods, when you have overcharged on an invoice, when a post-sale discount is agreed, when services were not fully delivered, or when you need to correct an invoice error. A credit note creates a proper audit trail without altering the original invoice.
A credit note is issued by the seller to reduce the amount the buyer owes — it is a negative document that decreases receivables on the seller's books. A debit note is either issued by the buyer to formally request a reduction, or by the seller to increase the amount owed above the original invoice. Credit notes reduce what the customer owes; debit notes increase it. Both must reference the original invoice and be reported in GST/VAT returns.
Yes — always. The original invoice number and date are mandatory fields on a credit note in all VAT and GST jurisdictions. This link is what allows tax authorities to verify that the credit is legitimately tied to a real transaction. Without the original invoice reference, the credit note cannot be used to reduce your VAT or GST liability on a tax return and may be rejected during an audit.
Under Indian GST, a credit note must include: the unique serial number (up to 16 characters), issue date, GSTIN of both supplier and recipient, original invoice number and date, reason for issue, taxable value and the GST components (CGST, SGST or IGST) being reversed, and the nature of supply adjustment. It must be reported in GSTR-1 for the month of issue. The time limit is the earlier of 30th September of the following financial year or the date of filing the annual return (GSTR-9).
No. In the UK and most other VAT jurisdictions, a credit note cannot be issued to write off a bad debt. Credit notes are only for correcting trading issues — returns, overcharges, discounts, errors. For bad debts, the correct mechanism is a bad debt relief claim on your VAT return (subject to time limits). The two situations are treated differently in law: price reductions via credit note are not time-barred in the UK, while bad debt claims are limited to four years and six months from the original supply date.
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