![]() I canceled the one I sent to myself because it was for tutorial purposes, and I don’t feel like sending myself money that has fees taken out of it. Fees are applied at the time an invoice is paid by your customer with their credit or debit card - and your customers are never charged a fee. When you're on the Create Invoice page, simply click 'Save', then 'Save. This makes it easy to send out your next invoice in just a few minutes. ![]() This includes everything from your logo and business information to item details, notes and Terms and Conditions. You can send an unlimited number of invoices for a fee of only 2.5 per invoice. With PayPal Invoicing you can save any of your invoice details onto an invoice template. In the drop down box there, by copy, you can click the arrow and you find the cancel button. As always with Zettle, there are no hidden fees or lock-in contracts. (in which i blurred out everything but the invoice i mock-sent to my crafts email address for the purposes of this tutorial). And in the memo portion, those are notes for yourself. Scrolling down the page you can find shipping, tax, and a place for % discounts.įill it all out, you can add your terms and conditions, plus a little THANK YOU! type note. I added details, including a product and cost, and email address. You fill it out – with an email address, product(s), invoice number (i believe they start you at 0001, but you could start at 1000 if you wanted, just make sure they go in numerical order :). Additional paid services are available through your PayPal business account. This is the image you get (blurred out my details, again) when you come to the invoice front page. When you start accepting payments, you’ll pay a percentage fee ranging from 1.9 to 3.5 and a fixed fee of 5 to 49 cents for each transaction. Whether it be for crafts, arts, food, whatever. ![]() The one on the far right is “create invoice” That’s where you go to make an invoice. You go up to the Send&Request button, and click it, and you come to this page: So that first image up there is your paypal home page. I ordered a to-be-made present for a sister from a friend tonight and I asked Katie “do you send a paypal invoice?” And she replied “i don’t know how to do that, just send me the money.” So i sent the money, but figured I’d make a tutorial on how to make a paypal invoice – that’s how I prefer to sell things that don’t get sold via my artfire. It’s the holiday season now, right? And it’s time to be buying Christmas presents.
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