Event Planner Invoice Template
Invoice template for event planners and coordinators. Track planning fees, vendor payments, and day-of coordination with detailed event billing.
Create Your Event Planner InvoiceWhat should a Event Planner invoice include?
A Event Planner invoice should include your business name, client details, invoice number, date, itemized services with rates, subtotal, applicable taxes, payment terms, and total amount due. Typical line items for Event Planner invoices include event planning fee — flat fee or percentage of budget, day-of coordination — on-site management, and vendor sourcing and management — coordination fee.
Typical Line Items for Event Planner Invoices
- ● Event planning fee — flat fee or percentage of budget
- ● Day-of coordination — on-site management
- ● Vendor sourcing and management — coordination fee
- ● Venue booking and liaison — site selection and negotiation
- ● Decor and design — concept development and execution
- ● Vendor deposits and payments — pass-through costs
- ● Travel and accommodation — for destination events
Payment Terms Best Practices
Planning fee: 50% at contract signing, 25% at midpoint, 25% two weeks before event. Vendor payments: pass-through invoiced as received (typically 30-90 days before event). Day-of coordination: full payment 2 weeks before event.
Tax Considerations
Event planning services may be subject to sales tax in some states. Vendor pass-through payments are generally not taxable as your revenue. Food and beverage costs may have separate tax treatment. Track all event expenses meticulously for client billing.
Note: Tax rules vary by state and jurisdiction. Always consult a tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
Professional Tips for Event Planner Invoices
- ✓ Clearly separate your planning fee from vendor pass-through costs
- ✓ Include event date, venue, and guest count on every invoice
- ✓ Provide a detailed budget tracker alongside your invoices
- ✓ Document vendor payment deadlines and penalties for client awareness
- ✓ Include a force majeure and cancellation clause in your contract
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Frequently Asked Questions
Should I charge a flat fee or percentage of event budget?
Flat fees work well for smaller events with defined scope. Percentage-based (typically 15-20% of total event budget) is standard for larger events where scope scales with budget. Some planners use a hybrid: flat base fee plus percentage above a threshold.
How do I handle vendor kickbacks ethically?
Transparency is key. Some planners accept vendor commissions (typically 10-15%) and disclose this to clients. Others pass all savings to the client and charge a higher planning fee. Choose one approach and document it in your contract.
What happens if the event is cancelled?
Your contract should include a cancellation clause. Typically: full refund minus expenses if cancelled 90+ days out, 50% refund at 60 days, no refund within 30 days. Vendor deposits may be non-refundable regardless — communicate this clearly.