The Best Free Invoicing Software in 2026
“Free” invoicing software ranges from genuinely free forever to “free until you need the one feature you actually want.” This is an honest rundown of the best free options in 2026, what each is really good at, and where the catch is.
Disclosure: we build one of the tools on this list (Inkvoice). We’ve tried to keep the comparison fair — every tool here is a reasonable pick depending on what you need.
What “free” should actually get you
Before the list, the bar. A free invoicing tool worth using should let you:
- Create unlimited, professional invoices (no per-invoice cap).
- Reuse clients and line items instead of retyping them.
- Send quotes/estimates and recurring invoices.
- Track what’s paid and what’s outstanding.
- Export your own data, so you’re never locked in.
A quick note on “online payments”: several tools advertise “get paid online,” which means they take a processing fee per transaction. That’s a paid feature wearing a free hat — worth knowing when you compare.
The shortlist
| Tool | Free tier | Open source | Self-host | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inkvoice | Full, no caps | Yes (MIT) | Yes | Owning your data; freelancers who self-host |
| Wave | Invoicing + accounting | No | No | US/Canada small businesses |
| Zoho Invoice | Generous, polished | No | No | Solo users inside the Zoho ecosystem |
| Invoice Ninja | Free tier + OSS | Yes | Yes | Power users who want every feature |
Inkvoice
Free and open-source (MIT), with no invoice caps. You get the get-paid-faster toolkit — recurring invoices, quotes, customer statements, and read receipts (see when a client opened the invoice) — plus professional PDF templates, multi-currency and multi-language (EN/TR). The wedge versus the hosted-only tools is ownership: you can self-host it in minutes (Docker, Dokploy, Coolify) or use the hosted version, and your data is always yours to export. It records payments rather than processing them, so there are no transaction fees — you mark invoices paid as the money lands.
Best for: freelancers and small teams who want a clean, modern tool and want to own their data.
Wave
Wave has long been a popular free pick because it bundles invoicing with real accounting. The trade-offs: it’s closed-source and hosted-only (your data lives on their servers), and its strongest features are oriented around US/Canada. If you want bookkeeping and invoicing in one free place and you’re in a supported region, it’s solid.
Zoho Invoice
Genuinely free and very polished, especially if you already live in Zoho’s ecosystem. It’s closed-source and hosted-only, and the free tier is aimed at solo users — but for a clean, no-cost invoicing experience it’s hard to fault.
Invoice Ninja
The other big open-source name. Very feature-rich with a free tier and a self-host option. That power comes with more setup and a heavier footprint than a minimal tool — great if you want every knob, more than you need if you just want to send clean invoices fast.
How to choose
- Want to own your data / self-host? → an open-source tool (Inkvoice or Invoice Ninja).
- Want bookkeeping bundled in and you’re in the US/Canada? → Wave.
- Want the most polished hosted free tier and you use Zoho? → Zoho Invoice.
- Want lightweight, modern, and yours, without transaction fees? → Inkvoice.
The honest summary: any of these will send a professional invoice for free. The real differentiator in 2026 is lock-in — whether you can pick up your data and leave. If that matters to you, start with an open-source option.