This article was co-authored by Paridhi Jain and by wikiHow staff writer, Hunter Rising. Paridhi Jain is a Certified Public Accountant and the Co-Founder of Seva Ltd, a CPA firm operating in Maryland and Alabama. She has over 10 years of professional experience in the financial sector and has built a reputation for assisting small business owners navigate the intricacies of regulatory compliance, encompassing areas from company structuring and entity formation to detailed nexus determinations for income and sales tax. She is an active member of the Alabama Society of CPAs and has a certification in pre-professional accounting. She graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County with a major in Information Systems.
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Whether you sell products or offer professional services, giving your customers receipts helps you track all your transactions and finances. Receipt books contain multiple fillable forms that you can tear out and give to customers any time you make a sale. If you don't want to hassle with setting up digital receipts, writing them by hand in a book is the perfect way to log your sales. Keep reading, and we'll cover every detail to fill in when you're writing in your receipt book.