Photography & Videography Invoice Generator

Create a professional photography or videography invoice with shoot date, location, package, deliverables and usage/licensing rights, then download as a clean PDF — free, no sign-up required.

Din bedriftsinformasjon

Kundeinformasjon

Tilpass fakturaen

Legg til logo

Fakturadetaljer

Fakturalinjer

MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
MVA
kr0.00
Delsum:kr0.00
kr0.00
(%)
kr0.00

MVA beregnes kun på linjer der “MVA”-boksen er krysset av.

Totalt:kr0.00
kr0.00
Utestående:kr0.00

Signatur

Legg til autorisert signatur. Den vises kun på forhåndsvisning og PDF dersom du faktisk signerer.

Forhåndsvisning:

Din skrevne signatur vises her

Gratis fakturaapp

Invoice24 logo

Brukt av over 3 000 000+ bedrifter verden over

Send fakturaer på sekunder, følg betalinger og ha full kontroll på kontantstrømmen – direkte fra mobilen med Invoice24-appen.

Last ned i App StoreLast ned på Google Play
Your Business
FAKTURA
Kundeinformasjon
Fakturadato
BeskrivelseAntallSatsBeløp
Photography package — full-day coverage (8 hrs)1kr0.00kr0.00
Second shooter / assistant1kr0.00kr0.00
Editing & retouching1kr0.00kr0.00
Digital delivery — edited images via online gallery1kr0.00kr0.00
Usage license — commercial use, web + print, 12 months1kr0.00kr0.00
Fine-art album / prints1kr0.00kr0.00
Travel & accommodation1kr0.00kr0.00
Less: non-refundable retainer received on booking1kr0.00kr0.00
Delsumkr0.00
MVA (25%)kr0.00
Totaltkr0.00

Free photography & videography invoice template

Create a professional photography or videography invoice in minutes — with shoot date, location, package, deliverables, delivery due date and, most importantly, your usage/licensing terms prefilled where it matters. Add your line items, download as a clean PDF, and get paid faster. Free, with no sign-up required. This page covers both photographers and videographers — for wedding, portrait, commercial, real-estate and video-production billing alike.

What should a photography or videography invoice include?

Beyond the standard invoice basics — invoice number, date, business and client details, line items and total — a photography or videography invoice needs to capture the shoot itself, not just the payment. Clients expect to see exactly what was shot, where, what they get, and — critically — what they're allowed to do with it.

  • Shoot/session date(s) — the defining field of this document type
  • Shoot location or venue
  • Package or session type (wedding, portrait, commercial, real-estate, brand film…)
  • Deliverables — exact count and format ("400 edited photos + online gallery", "3-min highlight film 4K + 60s social cut")
  • Usage/licensing rights — personal vs commercial, media, territory, duration
  • Delivery due date, so the client knows when to expect the final gallery or cut
  • A non-refundable retainer shown as a credit against the balance, never silently folded into the total

Why usage/licensing rights belong on the invoice

Professional photography and videography invoicing treats usage rights as their own billable line — "rights, not labor." A client who books a shoot for personal use (a family portrait, a wedding album) has different rights than one who wants the images for a national ad campaign. Spelling out personal vs commercial use, which media it covers (web, print, broadcast), the territory, and the license duration on the invoice protects both parties and is standard practice across wedding, commercial, real-estate and video-production photography alike. A separate "usage license upgrade" line item is common when a client's needs expand after the shoot.

Retainers, deposits and the balance due

The wedding and event photography industry is emphatic about the wording: a "retainer" (paid to secure the date, typically non-refundable, usually 25–50% at booking) is legally distinct from a refundable "deposit," and the two terms are not interchangeable in a contract. Show the retainer as a negative credit line on the final invoice — "Less: non-refundable retainer received on booking" — rather than simply presenting a lower total, so the client can see exactly what they already paid and what remains. Getting this wrong is one of the most common sources of client disputes and mistrust in the industry.

Norsk fakturagenerator

FAQs about photography & videography invoices