Profession Guide|Invoicing

Invoice Format for Content Creators in India — Domestic & Foreign Clients

Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team

Your invoice needs: your name/business name, GSTIN (if registered), client details, service description, SAC code, amount, and payment terms. For foreign clients, add LUT endorsement and bill in the client's currency.

Who this applies to

  • Content Creators who need professional invoice templates
  • Content Creators invoicing foreign clients for the first time
  • Freelancers confused about GST invoice requirements
  • Content Creators wanting compliant invoicing without complexity
Typical Income Model
Ad revenue, sponsorships, affiliate income, digital products
Client Mix
50% foreign (ad revenue), 50% domestic (sponsorships)

How this works for Content Creators

1

Every invoice must include: your name, address, GSTIN (if applicable), client details, invoice number, date, description, amount, payment terms.

2

GST-registered with Indian clients: include SAC code, taxable value, CGST+SGST or IGST, and total.

3

Foreign clients with LUT: state 'Export of Services under LUT without payment of IGST'. Bill in client's currency.

4

Use sequential invoice numbering and keep it consistent through the financial year.

5

Not GST registered? Issue a 'Bill of Supply' — no GST breakup needed.

6

Maintain copies of all invoices — digital is fine for ITR and GST reconciliation.

Common deductible tools for Content Creators

Adobe Premiere ProCanvaCapCutNotionGoogle Sheets

Commonly missed expenses

CameraMicrophoneLightingEditing softwareStudioPropsTravel

Real examples

Content Creator invoicing Indian client

Standard GST invoice with SAC code for domestic services.

Annual Income
₹18L
Estimated Savings
Better client relationships + compliance
Without TaxTap
No proper invoice → no GST ITC for client
With TaxTap
GST-compliant invoice, smooth payments

Content Creator invoicing foreign client

Export invoice with LUT endorsement, foreign currency billing.

Annual Income
₹32L
Estimated Savings
18% GST saved for client
Without TaxTap
Charging 18% IGST unnecessarily
With TaxTap
Zero-rated with LUT, no GST charged

What should you do?

GST registered: Tax Invoice (domestic) + LUT export invoice (foreign).

Not GST registered: Bill of Supply for all clients.

Always invoice foreign clients in their currency — conversion at bank rate on receipt date.

Include bank details and payment terms on every invoice.

Mistakes to avoid

Not mentioning LUT on export invoices.

Random invoice numbering instead of sequential.

Not including SAC code on GST invoices.

Invoicing foreign clients in INR instead of their currency.

Not keeping FIRC/BRC as proof against each foreign invoice.

Documents you need

  • All invoice copies for the FY
  • FIRC/BRC matching foreign invoices
  • LUT acknowledgment
  • Client contracts or engagement letters
  • Payment confirmations

Need help with invoicing and documentation?

From GST-compliant invoices to FIRC tracking — we set up a system that just works.

FAQs: Invoicing for Content Creators

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