How to get GoDaddy invoices
Step-by-step guide to downloading your GoDaddy billing documents.
Last verified: 2026-04-24
Step-by-step: download invoices from GoDaddy
- 1
Sign in and open My Products
Go to godaddy.com and sign in with the account that actually holds the products. GoDaddy customers often end up with two or three separate logins over the years (personal, company, old agency handover), and each one is its own silo. Click your username in the top-right, then My Products. This is the mission-control view for domains, hosting, Microsoft 365 seats, SSL certificates, and anything else you have ever bought.
- 2
Switch to Billing & Payments
From My Products, open the Billing & Payments section, or go directly to account.godaddy.com/orders. This is the Orders tab where every charge lives, regardless of product. It lists renewals, new purchases, upgrades, and refunds in one chronological feed. The URL stays the same whether you have one domain or three hundred.
- 3
Filter by date range and product
GoDaddy shows the last 60 days by default, which is almost never what an accountant wants. Use the date filter to pick the period you actually need (a quarter, a tax year, last month). You can also filter by product type so that domain renewals, hosting charges, and Microsoft 365 licenses do not blur into one long list.
- 4
Open each order and download the receipt
Click the order number to open its detail page. GoDaddy calls the PDF a Receipt rather than an Invoice, but it carries the same information a bookkeeper needs. Hit Download Receipt or Print Receipt to save the PDF. If the order bundled several products (a domain plus privacy plus hosting on the same purchase), they all appear on one PDF as separate line items.
- 5
File receipts by product line, not by date
Rename the PDF with a consistent pattern such as date-product-amount and route it to the folder your accountant expects. If you cross-bill domains or hosting to clients, keep those receipts in a separate stack from the internal ones. Mixing a reseller charge with your own overhead is how agencies lose money at reconciliation time.
About GoDaddy billing
GoDaddy is not really one product. It is a registrar, a hosting company, a Microsoft 365 reseller, an SSL provider, a Website Builder, and a handful of smaller add-ons, all stapled to a single login. The receipts reflect that sprawl.
Most customers end up with several different subscriptions on different renewal cycles, often on auto-renew, often with slightly different billing entities depending on where they live. Finding any single receipt is easy. Making sure you have all of them, for a whole tax year, across every product, is the actual work.
The most common GoDaddy billing surprise is an auto-renewal on something you forgot you owned. Domains bought in a hurry five years ago, an old Microsoft 365 seat for an employee who left, a standalone SSL certificate on a site you retired. They all keep charging on whatever payment method still works. Audit the Renewals tab once a year, not once a decade.
About GoDaddy
GoDaddy was founded in 1997 and is headquartered in Tempe, Arizona. It is one of the largest domain registrars in the world and has expanded into shared and WordPress hosting, Website Builder, reseller Microsoft 365 plans, SSL certificates, and a growing set of commerce products. Most US customers are billed by GoDaddy.com LLC. Most European and UK customers are billed by GoDaddy Europe Ltd (Ireland), which changes how VAT appears on the receipt. All charges land on one Orders page under Billing & Payments, regardless of product.
Manual vs automated
Manual
- Sign in to the right GoDaddy login
- Open Billing & Payments then Orders
- Filter by date range and product
- Click into each order
- Download the receipt PDF
- Rename, file, repeat for every renewal
Automated with Inbox Ledger
- Connect GoDaddy once to Inbox Ledger
- Domain, hosting, and Microsoft 365 receipts land in your dashboard automatically
- Export to Drive, Sheets, or your accounting system
Why people stop doing this by hand
One domain and a hosting plan: manual works. The breakdown point comes when GoDaddy becomes your general-purpose infrastructure vendor, which it quietly does for a lot of small businesses.
A founder with 15 domains parked for future ideas, a production hosting plan, a Website Builder for a side project, and five Microsoft 365 seats for the team will see somewhere between 20 and 30 separate receipts a year, scattered across the calendar because every domain renews on its own anniversary. An agency running a GoDaddy Pro account on top of its own retail account has two parallel billing trails that do not talk to each other. Neither dashboard is built for a finance team closing a month. Both are built for an owner who wants to renew one thing at a time.
GoDaddy does offer APIs, but billing data is not meaningfully exposed through them, and most bookkeepers are not going to pick up a script to solve a receipts problem.
GoDaddy is one of the portals our Chrome Extension auto-detects. Install it, open your Billing & Payments page, and the extension captures new receipts in the background as you browse. It works alongside the main Inbox Ledger sync for receipts that arrive by email, so both silos end up in the same dashboard without any manual download step.
Next step
A single domain and one hosting plan: the Orders page is enough. A portfolio of domains, a production stack, Microsoft 365 seats, and a Pro reseller account: connect GoDaddy to Inbox Ledger once, and stop reconstructing a year of receipts by hand at tax time.
Where to look in the dashboard
- Username menu → My Products is the mission-control view for everything you own
- Username menu → Billing & Payments → Orders is the canonical receipt history
- Username menu → Account Settings → Company Information holds the legal name, address, and VAT ID printed on future receipts
- Username menu → Renewals & Billing → Auto-Renewal is where you turn off the auto-charge reflex before a surprise renewal
- Microsoft 365 receipts live under the same Orders page as domain receipts, even though the product itself is managed in a separate control panel
Before you start — quick checklist
- The legal entity name you entered under Account Settings, not a personal alias, is on the receipt
- Domain renewals show the registration period (1 year, 2 years, 10 years) and the exact TLD
- Hosting, Website Builder, and WordPress plan charges are listed with the correct tier and cycle
- Microsoft 365 seat counts match what is actually provisioned in your control panel
- VAT or GST appears on receipts issued by GoDaddy Europe Ltd for customers inside the EU or UK
- Refunds, credits, and promo adjustments appear as negative lines so the net matches your card statement
Pro tips
- GoDaddy auto-renewal is on by default on nearly every product and the reminders are easy to miss. A domain, a hosting plan, an SSL certificate, and a Microsoft 365 seat can all renew in the same week at wildly different prices. Check the Renewals tab before the billing date, not after.
- The billing entity changes by region. GoDaddy.com LLC (Arizona) handles most US customers, GoDaddy Europe Ltd (Ireland) handles most EU and UK customers, and smaller subsidiaries cover markets like India and Australia. Your receipts will show whichever entity actually billed you, which affects VAT, reverse-charge treatment, and the address your accountant files against.
- PayPal and card payments show up the same way on the Orders page, but the receipt line under Payment Method tells you which one was charged. If you switch between PayPal and a company card to manage cash flow, label the PDFs accordingly before filing.
- Product migrations create phantom line items. Office 365 plans rebranded as Microsoft 365 a few years ago, and some customers still see legacy SKU names on old receipts. Domain privacy was also rebundled into Full Domain Privacy and Protection. Expect the product label to drift on older PDFs even when nothing in your usage changed.
- GoDaddy Pro Reseller accounts and Basic customer accounts bill separately. If you run a Pro account to manage client domains and also hold a few domains under your own retail account, you will have two completely independent Orders histories. Neither dashboard shows the other.
- Past receipts cannot be edited once issued. If your company name or VAT ID was wrong at the time of purchase, GoDaddy support can reissue recent receipts with corrected details, but only inside the same fiscal year. Fix your Account Settings now so the next renewal lands clean.
Skip this entirely. Automate GoDaddy invoices
Inbox Ledger scans your email for GoDaddy invoices, extracts the data with AI, and syncs it to QuickBooks, Xero, or Google Sheets. No manual downloads.
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