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Free Purchase Order Generator

Build a clean, vendor-ready purchase order with line items, tax, shipping, and standard payment terms — live preview on the right, print or download when you're done.

Live PO preview as you type Print-ready and copy-as-text in one click Unlimited line items, tax, and shipping
Buyer (you)
Vendor / Supplier
Line items
Description
Qty
Unit price

A purchase order becomes a binding contract once the vendor accepts it in writing. Review the line items, pricing, and shipping terms before sending, and keep a copy for three-way matching against the vendor's delivery receipt and invoice. This tool provides general guidance, not legal advice.

What you get out of this purchase order generator

Most small businesses and freelancers email "can you ship X by Friday?" and then chase the vendor when the wrong thing shows up. A real PO closes that loophole — and this free PO generator makes one in under a minute.

60 sec

From blank page to vendor inbox

Fill in the buyer, vendor, line items, and terms. The live preview on the right is the document you send — print it, copy it, or save the JSON for your records.

8 fields

Every field a real PO needs

PO number, issue date, expected delivery, buyer info, vendor info, itemized lines, tax + shipping, and payment / shipping terms. Nothing missing, nothing bloated.

$0

Free forever, no signup

No watermark, no email wall, no trial countdown. Most free PO templates are Word files behind a signup form — this one runs in your browser.

Why a vague email isn't a purchase order

Subcontractors, suppliers, and freelancers all run into the same procurement mess. If it isn't on a numbered PO, it isn't really agreed to.

  • Email-only orders get disputed. When the vendor invoices you for the wrong quantity or the wrong unit price, the only thing you can point to is a thread of "sounds good" replies. A PO with a number, line items, and a date is the agreement — the email is just the cover letter.
  • No PO means no audit trail. If you ever need to file an expense report, justify a charge to a client, or hand the books to an accountant, a missing PO is a missing receipt. The PO number is what ties the order, the delivery, and the invoice together.
  • Subs don't always know what they were promised. Verbal scope is the #1 reason small projects blow past their budget. A printed purchase order pinned to the job folder is the cheapest dispute insurance you can buy.
  • Most free PO templates are locked behind email walls. Search "free purchase order template" and you'll get five Word files, each one asking for your email and selling you procurement software two days later. This PO generator is just the tool — no signup, no upsell, no watermark.

Everything this free PO generator handles

Built around the eight fields procurement, AP, and small business owners actually use — not a 30-field enterprise form.

Auto-suggested PO number

Defaults to PO-2026-001 so you don't have to invent a numbering scheme. Override it with your own format any time — POs should always be sequential and never repeat.

Buyer / vendor split

Two clearly labelled blocks for the buyer (you) and the vendor or supplier you're ordering from. The vendor block doubles as the ship-to address on the printed PO.

Itemized line items with tax and shipping

Add as many lines as you need. The tool calculates each line total, the subtotal, tax at your chosen rate, the flat shipping cost, and the grand total live as you type.

Standard payment and shipping terms

Net 7, 14, 30, 60, or due on receipt for payment. FOB Origin, FOB Destination, Pickup, Delivery, or Custom for shipping. Defaults match the most common small-business setups.

How to create a purchase order online

Three steps, no account required.

  1. Step 1

    Enter the parties and the order

    Type your business as the buyer, the supplier as the vendor, and add a line item for each thing you're ordering. Quantity × unit price calculates instantly.

  2. Step 2

    Pick terms and shipping

    Choose payment terms (most freelance and small-business POs use Net 30) and shipping terms. Add tax and a flat shipping cost if they apply.

  3. Step 3

    Print, copy, or download

    Hit Print PO for a clean printable layout, Copy as text to paste into an email, or Download JSON to keep a structured record alongside the printed copy.

Why use a purchase order generator instead of a Word template

A purchase order generator solves the one problem every Word PO template has: the math is wrong half the time. Type a unit price, change a quantity, edit the tax rate — and now you have to re-do the line totals, the subtotal, and the grand total by hand. This free PO generator does that math live in the right-hand preview, so what you print is what you actually owe.

The other reason: a purchase order maker keeps the format consistent. Every PO you send a vendor looks the same, has a sequential PO number, and lists the same fields in the same order. Vendors process orders faster when they don't have to hunt for the line items, and your accounts payable workflow gets cleaner because every document fits the same three-way match.

The 8 fields every purchase order needs

A real PO doesn't need 30 fields. It needs eight, and most enterprise procurement software is just a heavier wrapper around these:

  1. PO number — sequential, unique, never reused. PO-2026-001, PO-2026-002, etc.
  2. Issue date — the day the buyer creates the PO.
  3. Expected delivery date — when the buyer needs the goods or services.
  4. Buyer information — your business name, billing address, AP contact email.
  5. Vendor information — supplier business name, ship-to address, contact name.
  6. Line items — a clear description, quantity, and unit price for each item ordered.
  7. Totals — subtotal, tax, shipping, and grand total.
  8. Terms — payment terms (Net 30, due on receipt, etc.) and shipping terms (FOB Origin, FOB Destination, etc.).

Drop any of these and you've created an order that's hard to dispute later. This generator includes all eight by default, plus a notes field and a signature line on the printed version.

How three-way matching works (and why your PO is the anchor)

Three-way matching is the procurement standard most accounting and AP teams follow. Before a vendor invoice gets paid, three documents have to agree:

  1. The purchase order — what the buyer ordered.
  2. The delivery receipt or goods receipt note — what actually showed up.
  3. The vendor invoice — what the vendor is asking to be paid for.

If all three match on quantity and price, the invoice is approved and paid. If they don't, the discrepancy is investigated before any money leaves the account. The PO is the anchor — without it, there's nothing to match against, and your accounts payable team is left taking the vendor's word for it. That's exactly the situation a free PO generator is meant to prevent.

Shipping terms in plain English

Shipping terms confuse first-time buyers more than any other field on a purchase order. Here's the version you actually need:

  • FOB Origin — you take ownership at the vendor's dock. You pay freight and you're on the hook if it's damaged.
  • FOB Destination — the vendor keeps ownership until it arrives at your door. They pay freight and they're liable in transit.
  • Pickup — you'll collect the order from the vendor's location yourself.
  • Delivery — the vendor will deliver, usually with no specific FOB language because the order is local.
  • Custom — anything else you've negotiated. Spell it out in the notes field.

For most small-business orders, FOB Destination is the safer default — it puts the cost and risk on the party (the vendor) that's better positioned to handle it.

Common pitfalls when creating a purchase order

The most common ways a PO falls apart in the wild:

  • No PO number. Without a sequential PO number, you can't reference the order on the invoice and you can't audit it later. Always number every PO, even the small ones.
  • Vague descriptions. "Office supplies — $200" is not a line item. List the actual item, the quantity, and the unit price. The vendor should be able to fulfil the order from the description alone.
  • No signature line. Even if you're sending the PO by email, the printed copy should have an authorized signature space. It signals that the buyer's side is committed and reduces the chance of unauthorized internal orders.
  • Missing delivery date. "When you can" is not a deadline. Pick a date — even a generous one — so the vendor can schedule and so you have a reference point if it slips.
  • Tax rate left at zero by accident. If you're a buyer in a state or country that charges sales tax or VAT on this purchase, set the rate before you send. Forgetting it leads to invoices that don't match the PO.

When an email confirmation is enough — and when you really need a PO

You don't need a PO for everything. The honest test:

  • Email is fine for one-off purchases under a few hundred dollars from a vendor you trust, where the description is unambiguous (a single subscription renewal, a single delivery).
  • A PO is worth the 60 seconds for any order with more than one line item, any recurring or subscription order, any order being recharged to a client, any order from a new vendor, and any order that crosses your internal approval threshold (most small businesses set this at $500 or $1,000).

A free PO generator only earns its keep if you actually use it on the second category. The good news is the friction is now genuinely zero — fill the fields, print the document, send it. The first time a vendor disputes a charge and you can email back the PO number, the habit pays for itself.

Frequently asked questions

What's the difference between a PO and an invoice?
A purchase order is sent by the buyer before any goods or services change hands — it's the buyer saying "I want to order this, at this price, by this date." An invoice is sent by the vendor after delivery, requesting payment for what was already supplied. The PO authorizes the spend; the invoice collects on it.
Do I need a PO for small purchases?
Not always. For one-off purchases under a few hundred dollars, an emailed confirmation is usually enough. POs become essential once an order is recurring, has multiple line items, involves a third-party client recharge, or sits above whatever internal threshold your business sets — many small businesses use $500 or $1,000 as the cutoff.
Is a purchase order legally binding?
A PO becomes a binding contract the moment the vendor accepts it — usually by acknowledging it in writing or by starting to fulfil the order. Until then, it's an offer. The terms on the PO (price, quantity, delivery date, payment terms) are what govern the relationship, which is why vague emails are a poor substitute.
Should I number my purchase orders?
Yes, always. POs should be sequential and never reused — PO-2026-001, PO-2026-002, and so on. Sequential numbering is what makes a three-way match possible (PO + delivery receipt + invoice) and what auditors look for first. This generator defaults to PO-2026-001 but you can use any format you like, as long as it's unique.
What's the difference between FOB Origin and FOB Destination?
FOB Origin means ownership and shipping risk transfer to the buyer at the vendor's loading dock — you pay for freight and you're liable if it's damaged in transit. FOB Destination means the vendor keeps ownership and risk until the goods arrive at your door. FOB Destination is the safer default for most small-business buyers.
What's the difference between a PO and a work order?
A purchase order is sent from a buyer to an external vendor. A work order is internal — it's a manager assigning a specific task or job to an employee or in-house team. POs trigger AP workflows; work orders trigger labor scheduling. They sometimes look similar on paper, but they exist for completely different reasons.
How do I send a purchase order to a vendor?
Print the PO from this generator (or copy it as text), attach the printed version to a short email to your vendor contact, and ask them to confirm receipt and acceptance. Save your copy alongside the JSON download or in your accounting system, and reference the PO number on every related email and invoice.
Does this work as a PO template for freelancers and contractors?
Yes. Freelancers most often receive POs from larger clients (ad agencies, IT departments, government contractors) and need to reference a client-issued PO number on invoices. You can also use this generator to issue your own POs to subcontractors — designers hiring illustrators, GCs hiring trades, etc.

Need an invoice next? Skip the second tool.

Once the goods arrive and you need to bill a client back — or the vendor needs to invoice you against this PO — the InvoiceCat invoice generator builds the matching document in two minutes.

Open the invoice generator

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