Medical Invoice Generator
Create a professional invoice for private-practice medical, therapy or allied-health services, with patient, treatment-date and provider registration fields — then download as a clean PDF, free, no sign-up required.
Your Business Information
Client Information
Brand Your Invoice
Invoice Details
Line Items
Tax is applied only to line items with the “No VAT” box ticked.
Signature
Add your authorised signature. It will only appear on the invoice preview and PDF if you actually sign.
Preview:
| Invoice Date | — |
| Description | Quantity | Rate | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial consultation (30 min) | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Follow-up consultation (15 min) | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Therapy session (50 min) | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Physiotherapy treatment session | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Blood draw + laboratory panel | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Vaccination / injection administration | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Telehealth consultation | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Medical report / certificate fee | 1 | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Subtotal | £0.00 |
| Total | £0.00 |
Free medical invoice generator & superbill template
Create a professional invoice for private-practice medical, therapy or allied-health services in minutes. Add patient details, treatment dates and your registration number, mark each line taxable or exempt, and download a clean PDF — free, with no sign-up required.
What should a private practice invoice or superbill include?
Every private-pay medical invoice needs the basics — practice name and address, patient name, invoice number and date — plus a few fields specific to healthcare: the date each service was actually provided (not just the invoice date), your professional registration number, and a description of the service or treatment. Insurance-ready "superbills" go further, adding the patient's date of birth, insurance member/group ID, and procedure codes per line so the patient can claim reimbursement.
- Practice/clinic name, address and provider registration number
- Patient name, and date of birth if the patient will claim insurance
- Date of service for each treatment line, separate from the invoice date
- Service/treatment description, with a procedure code (CPT, GOÄ-Ziffer, item number) where relevant
- Diagnosis code(s) — optional, only needed for insurer claims
- Fees, any payment received, and balance due
Do medical services carry VAT or sales tax?
In most of our 39 markets, medical care provided by a registered health professional is exempt from VAT, GST or an equivalent consumption tax — the tool defaults your tax rate to 0% for this reason. The exemption is usually purpose-based: it covers diagnosing, treating or curing a condition, but not purely cosmetic work, medico-legal reports, or fitness-for-work certificates, which are typically standard-rated. A handful of markets differ: Brazil applies a municipal service tax (ISS) to medical services, Japan taxes private/self-pay care (jiyū-shinryō) at its standard consumption-tax rate while insured treatment stays exempt, and Malaysia added a service tax specifically for private healthcare billed to non-citizen patients. Mixed invoices — an exempt consultation alongside a taxable certificate or cosmetic line — are handled natively: just mark each line taxable or not and the one overall rate applies only to the taxable lines.
Procedure codes: CPT, GOÄ-Ziffer and their equivalents
Every insurance-ready medical invoice format worldwide bills code-per-line, so this generator adds one extra column for it. In the US this is a CPT or HCPCS code; in Germany it's a GOÄ-Ziffer (and if you bill above the standard 2.3x multiplier, German rules require a short written justification — write it in the description, e.g. "GOÄ 65, Faktor 2,3"); in Australia it's a Medicare item number; in Switzerland/Liechtenstein it's a TARDOC position (the tariff that replaced TARMED on 1 January 2026); in Belgium it's an INAMI/RIZIV nomenclature code; in Brazil it's the 4.01-list service code used on the NFS-e. The column is optional and free-text, so it fits whichever code set applies in your market.



