Quotation Generator

Create professional quotes and estimates for clients — free, no signup, instant PDF.

From (your business)
Quote for (client)
Items

How to use the Quotation Generator

  1. Add your business and client details. Enter your name and your client's details at the top of the form.
  2. List your services and prices. Add each item with a quantity and rate. Subtotal, tax and total are calculated automatically.
  3. Set validity date and download. Enter the date the quote expires, add any notes or terms, then generate and download your PDF.

Why use our Quotation Generator

Professional quote in seconds. Add your details, list your services and generate a polished PDF quote you can email to any client.
Validity date built in. Set a 'valid until' date so clients know exactly how long your pricing stands — a key detail for serious proposals.
Converts easily to an invoice. Once a quote is accepted, recreate it as an invoice with our Invoice Maker — same line items, same structure.

Free to use — premium coming soon

FREE
  • Unlimited quotations
  • PDF download & print
  • Tax / VAT calculation
  • Validity date field
PREMIUM
  • Remove ads
  • Save business profile & logo
  • Auto quote numbering
  • Quote history & client list

About the Quotation Generator

The Quotation Generator lets you build a professional sales quote in your browser and download it as a clean, client-ready PDF. A quotation (also called a quote or sales quote) is the document you send a customer before any work begins: it lays out the agreed scope, an itemized price for each product or service, applicable tax, and the total the customer can expect to pay. Unlike an invoice, which is a payment demand issued after delivery, a quote is a fixed-price offer. Enter your business details, add line items with quantities and rates, set a validity date, and the tool assembles a tidy, branded document you can email or print.

Reach for this tool whenever a customer asks 'how much will it cost?' and you want to answer in writing rather than over the phone. Freelancers, tradespeople, agencies, consultants, and small suppliers all use quotes to win work, set expectations, and protect themselves from scope creep. A written quote with a clear breakdown removes ambiguity about what is and isn't included, and a stated validity period (commonly 30 days) lets you re-price if material or labour costs shift before the customer commits. Because the quoted figures are fixed once accepted, a clear quote also doubles as the basis for the invoice you raise after the job is done.

The generator works entirely in your browser. You fill in the header (your company name, logo, address, and contact details), the client's details, a unique quote number such as QT-001, the issue date, and an expiry date. Each line item takes a description, quantity, and unit rate; the tool multiplies and sums them, applies your chosen tax rate, and shows the subtotal, tax, and grand total automatically. You can add notes, payment terms, and an acceptance line so the customer can sign and return it. When you're happy, you export to PDF for emailing or printing. There's no spreadsheet maths to get wrong and no template wrestling.

Accuracy and privacy are built in. All calculations run on your device using standard arithmetic (line total = quantity x rate, then tax applied to the subtotal), so the figures match what you'd compute by hand. Nothing you type, your prices, client names, or company logo, is uploaded to a server; the document is generated locally and the PDF is created in your browser. That means sensitive commercial pricing never leaves your machine. Always double-check your tax rate and any discounts before sending, and remember that a quote is an offer: once a customer accepts it in writing, the price is contractually binding on both sides, so quote what you can genuinely deliver for.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between a quotation and an invoice?

A quotation is sent before work starts and offers a fixed price for an agreed scope, while an invoice is issued after delivery to request payment. The quote becomes legally binding only once the customer accepts it; an invoice is a final demand for money already owed.

How long is a quotation valid for?

There is no legal default, but most businesses make a quote valid for 30 days from the issue date, and some use one to three months. Stating an expiry date lets you re-price if your material or labour costs change before the customer commits.

Should a quote have a number, and how should I number it?

Yes, give each quote a unique reference so you can track it and link it to the later invoice. Use a separate sequential series from your invoices, such as QT-001, QT-002, to keep the two document types distinct.

Is a quotation legally binding?

A quote on its own is just an offer, but once the customer accepts it, typically by signing and returning it, it has the value of a contract. After acceptance the quoted price cannot be changed without a new agreement, so only quote figures you can deliver.

Is my pricing data safe when I use this generator?

Yes. The quote is built and the PDF is produced entirely in your browser, so your prices, client details, and logo are never uploaded to a server. Your commercial information stays on your own device.

From our blog

How to Write a CV That Passes the ATS and Still Reads Well to a Human

By the Super Simple Digital Tools Team · Updated June 2026

Before a person ever sees your CV, software often reads it first. Around the world recruiters lean heavily on applicant tracking systems that scan, sort and rank applications by keyword, and a document the machine cannot parse can be filtered out before anyone judges its content. That is why structure matters as much as wording: a CV has to satisfy two very different readers, an algorithm that wants clean, predictable data and a human who wants to understand your story in a few seconds. Building your CV in a form-driven generator helps because it produces consistent, selectable text in a layout designed to be machine-readable from the start.

Start with the bones. Use reverse-chronological order, listing your most recent role first, and label sections with the plain headings ATS systems expect, such as Work experience, Education and Skills. Avoid text boxes, multiple columns, headers and footers, logos and decorative graphics, because these are the elements parsers most often scramble or drop entirely. Keep your contact details to a name, phone number and email in the body of the document rather than tucked into a header. A simple, single-column layout is not boring, it is legible to both software and people.

Content is where most CVs win or lose. Recruiters frequently begin filtering by skills, so the abilities a job listing names should appear in your CV, in the same words, provided they are genuinely true of you. Write achievement bullets that carry numbers: "Reduced onboarding time by 30%" is parsed as a measurable data point and lands harder with a human than a vague "improved the onboarding process". Two role-specific keywords worth weaving in are the exact job title and, where natural, the type of work the position describes. Honesty is non-negotiable, never claim a skill or result you cannot stand behind in an interview.

Length and formatting decide whether all that good content actually fits. UK employers generally expect no more than two pages, and graduates can comfortably use one. To keep within that, set line spacing to 1.0, trim margins toward roughly 1.25 cm if needed, and use a standard font, Arial, Calibri or Times New Roman, at 10.5 to 12 points. Sans-serif fonts stay readable at smaller sizes. Resist the urge to shrink text below 10 points to cram more in; white space and a clean hierarchy of headings make a CV easier to skim than a wall of dense type.

Finally, tailor and check before you send. A single generic CV blasted to every vacancy rarely beats one adjusted to each role's wording, so revisit your personal statement and skills for each application. Export to PDF so your layout cannot shift on someone else's machine, then reopen the file and confirm the text is selectable, the spelling is right, and every date and title is accurate. The generator formats what you give it, but the facts and the proofreading are yours, and a single wrong date or typo can undo an otherwise strong application.

  • Match the skills and exact job title from the listing in your CV wording, but only claim what is genuinely true of you.
  • Write experience bullets with concrete numbers, such as percentages, amounts or counts, so achievements parse as data and stand out to readers.
  • Keep it to one page as a graduate and no more than two for most UK roles; use 1.0 line spacing and a 10.5 to 12 point standard font to fit.
  • After exporting, reopen the PDF and try selecting the text; if it highlights as text rather than an image, an ATS can read it too.

Read the full guide →

Tool by the Super Simple Digital Tools Team. Reviewed by our editorial team. Free to use, no signup required.

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