How to Find Walmart Receipts (2026 Guide: App, Online, and Historical)
Walmart receipts live in three places depending on how you paid. Here is how to find every one, online orders and in-store, and archive them properly.

Saturday morning supply run. You are stocking up for your small business, a landlord buying paint and light bulbs for a rental, or a caterer picking up bulk food for a Monday event. You tap your card, walk out with two full carts, throw the paper receipt on the dashboard. Monday morning you need it for your bookkeeping and it is gone. Fell behind the seat, blew out the window, or got tossed with the takeout bag. Welcome to the Walmart receipt problem.
Walmart receipts actually live in three places: the paper receipt the cashier hands you, an emailed receipt if you opted in, and the in-app Receipt Finder (if your payment card is registered to your account). Walmart.com orders are in a fourth place: the online order history on the website. None of these is a single source of truth, and moving receipts between them for expense reports or bookkeeping means checking all four systems and reconciling whatever is missing from the others.
This guide walks through each path, when to use which, and how to stop losing receipts for good by routing everything through your inbox. If you shop at Walmart once a month for personal items, the first half is plenty. If you run a business that buys from Walmart weekly, the volume adds up and the manual approach starts to hurt. Skip ahead to the automation section.
The short answer: to find a Walmart receipt, for online orders sign into walmart.com, open Account, then Purchase history, and download the PDF; for in-store purchases, open the Walmart app, tap Services, then Walmart Receipts (the Receipt Finder), which surfaces purchases paid with a card registered to your account. Emailed receipts arrive from receipts@walmart.com only if you opted into paperless.
The manual way: finding Walmart receipts
There are three distinct flows depending on how you bought.
Step 1: Walmart.com online orders
Sign into walmart.com. Click your name in the top right, then Account, then Purchase history. The page shows every online order with date, total, item count, and status (shipped, delivered, returned). Click any order to open the order detail page.
On the detail page, scroll to the bottom. There is a View receipt or Download invoice (PDF) link. Click it. A PDF opens with the full order details: your billing address, shipping address, itemized products with SKUs, subtotal, tax by state, shipping, and grand total. This PDF is the document your bookkeeper wants. It has everything needed for most expense policies, and for business-registered Walmart.com accounts, it includes your company name.
For multiple orders, you have to click each one individually. The purchase history list shows 10 orders per page. There is no "download all receipts" button. For a business that places 20 orders per month online, the manual download path is roughly 20 minutes of clicking per month.
Step 2: Walmart app Receipt Finder for in-store purchases
Open the Walmart app. Tap Services at the bottom of the home screen (or More depending on app version), then Walmart Receipts or Receipt Finder.
If this is your first time using it, the app asks you to register your payment methods. Enter the card you use at Walmart. You can register multiple cards (personal, business, the card your spouse uses), and the app will match receipts across all of them.
After setup, Receipt Finder shows a list of recent in-store purchases. Each entry has a date, store location, and total. Tap an entry to open the full receipt with line-items, subtotal, tax, and total. There is a View PDF button that generates a downloadable version.
The Receipt Finder only finds receipts paid with a registered card. If you paid cash or used an unregistered card, there is no record. The Receipt Finder also holds a limited window of history; older receipts eventually drop off and are not recoverable from this path, so check Walmart's current help docs if you need to confirm how far back yours goes.
Step 3: Check email if you opted in for paperless receipts
When you check out at a Walmart register, the cashier usually asks if you want to register for digital receipts. If you said yes at some point in the past, receipts now get emailed from receipts@walmart.com within a few hours of the purchase. Subject line is typically "Your Walmart receipt" or "Receipt from Walmart Store #1234."
Search Gmail or Outlook for from:receipts@walmart.com to see every digital receipt you have received. The email body contains the receipt inline (HTML), with a link to view the PDF version. The PDF link lives on walmart.com and requires account authentication to open.
If you never opted in for paperless receipts, this inbox is empty and the email path is not available to you. You cannot retroactively opt in for past purchases. The opt-in only applies going forward.
Step 4: For B2B purchases, use Walmart Business
If you buy from Walmart regularly for business purposes, sign up at business.walmart.com. It is a free account type that gives you consolidated monthly invoices, bulk ordering, tax-exempt purchasing (in eligible states), and a proper B2B invoice format that a personal walmart.com account does not produce.
Walmart Business invoices include your company name, business billing address, and a properly sequenced invoice number (rather than just a Walmart.com order number). For most business expense policies, the Walmart Business invoice is the correct document. The consumer order receipt is acceptable for small businesses and sole proprietors but may get flagged at larger companies with stricter AP requirements.
If you split purchases between personal and business needs (common for freelancers), use a separate Walmart Business account for your business-related buying. Paper receipts make it hard to separate the two after the fact. Keeping the transactions on separate accounts from the outset eliminates the sort-by-memory problem at tax time.
Why manual breaks at scale
Let's put numbers on it.
A single Walmart receipt takes about 60 seconds to find, download, rename, and file: open the app or walmart.com, find the specific purchase, download the PDF, rename to something meaningful, drop it in the right folder, categorize for bookkeeping. At 5 purchases per month (the occasional home-improvement run), that is five minutes. Fine.
At 20 purchases per month (a landlord maintaining a handful of rental properties, or a small contractor buying supplies per job), it is 20 minutes. Still tolerable.
At 50 purchases per month (a caterer, a property manager, a small retail reseller buying inventory), it is close to an hour of pure receipt handling. Every month. Forever. And that does not count the time spent finding the four or five receipts that fell through the cracks because the card was unregistered or the email opt-in was off when the purchase happened.
That is just the raw time. The real cost shows up in three places.
First, split personal-business purchases. Many small business owners use Walmart for both personal and business items on the same trip, on the same card. The receipt lists everything together. Manually splitting out which items are business deductions (the cleaning supplies for the rental property) from which are personal (the snacks you grabbed at the same time) is tedious, error-prone, and during an audit, easy for your accountant or the IRS to challenge. Having the line-item data structured (rather than trapped inside a PDF) makes the split dramatically easier.
Second, missed receipts. For in-store purchases, the Receipt Finder only catches what was paid with a registered card. Every time your spouse uses their card, every time you grabbed a different card by accident, every time you paid cash for a small cash purchase, the receipt is gone. For business deductions, gone means unreimbursable. Over a year, a business that buys at Walmart regularly can lose a real chunk of legitimate deductible expenses this way.
Third, sales tax tracking. Walmart receipts break out sales tax by line. For resale businesses that buy goods at retail and resell them (eBay sellers, flea-market vendors, Amazon resellers), the sales tax paid at Walmart may, depending on your state's rules and your resale-certificate status, be reclaimable or offset in state tax filings, but only if you have the receipt data structured. Check your state revenue authority's guidance, since the treatment varies. Scrolling through PDFs line by line to total sales tax paid is a multi-hour job that automation turns into an instant lookup.
Above 20 Walmart purchases per month, the manual path stops being trivial and starts being a regular operational task. Above 50, it is the kind of work that gets outsourced to a VA at a cost that nobody tracks carefully. Above 100 (realistic for some vendors and resellers), you need automation or you are leaving real money uncaptured.
Manual vs automated
| Manual | Automated with Inbox Ledger |
|---|---|
| Sign into walmart.com for each order download individually | Inbox watches for walmart.com emails as they arrive |
| Open Receipt Finder in the app for each in-store purchase | Full-PDF receipts extracted into structured data |
| Search Gmail for 'walmart receipt' and forward one by one | Line items parsed so personal and business can auto-split |
| Miss purchases paid with unregistered cards or cash | Captures every digital receipt, walmart.com order, and Receipt Finder email |
| Paper receipts end up lost within days | Routes to QuickBooks, Xero, or Drive per rule |
| Split personal and business line items by hand at tax time | Categorizes by SKU keywords, store location, or total amount |
| No bulk export for a full year of purchase history | Exports a full year with one click at tax time |
| Roughly 60 seconds per receipt you actually find | Zero minutes of your time after setup |
Automating with Inbox Ledger
The short version: Inbox Ledger watches your inbox, pulls every Walmart receipt as it arrives (whether from walmart.com, Receipt Finder, or paperless in-store), extracts the item-level data with an AI model, and routes each receipt to wherever your accounting lives. Connect via OAuth to Gmail, Outlook, or IMAP and the first sync pulls recent history, then runs incrementally. For in-store Receipt Finder receipts, the key is to have paperless email enabled in your Walmart account so every registered-card purchase triggers an email the extractor can capture. The line-item extraction (store, date, items with SKUs, subtotal, sales tax, total) is what makes splitting personal from business purchases workable without manual tagging.
From there, rules route each receipt to QuickBooks, Xero, Google Sheets, Google Drive, or OneDrive, and businesses running both a personal and a Walmart Business account can send each to a separate destination without cross-contamination. The other big-box stores work the same way once they hit your inbox, whether you are doing a Costco receipt lookup, a Target receipt lookup for in-store and online orders, or pulling the proper tax invoice from an Amazon Business order. If you are deciding how to file receipts across all your vendors, not just Walmart, the receipt organizer guide covers which system fits your volume. The Gmail invoice scanner and Outlook invoice scanner each give you a zero-setup preview of the Walmart receipts already sitting in your inbox.
Gotchas and edge cases
A few things that catch people off guard.
Walmart+ vs regular Walmart. Walmart+ is a subscription program with its own billing cycle (monthly or annual) and its own receipts. These are subscription receipts, not purchase receipts. They come from a different sender domain and should typically be categorized as a business service expense rather than as merchandise purchases. Automated rules can handle this by matching on subject line, but manual sorting is easy to mess up.
Returns and refunds. Walmart returns generate a return receipt in addition to the original purchase receipt. For bookkeeping, you want both: the original purchase (debit) and the return (credit) linked. Inbox Ledger captures both and maintains the link via order number or return ID, so your books reflect the net spend rather than double-counting.
Walmart.com marketplace vs Walmart-sold items. When you buy something on walmart.com, it might be sold by Walmart directly or by a third-party marketplace seller. The receipt format is similar in both cases, but the tax treatment, return policy, and often the document path differ. For business accounting, you may want to tag marketplace orders separately because the vendor record should reflect the actual seller, not just "Walmart." Most automation rules can extract the seller from the receipt body and tag accordingly.
Walmart Grocery (pickup and delivery) orders have a different receipt flow than standard walmart.com orders. The order confirmation is sent at checkout, but the final receipt is not generated until after pickup or delivery, when the actual items and substitutions are known. The final receipt can arrive 1 to 3 days after the order, with adjusted totals reflecting out-of-stock substitutions. If you are reconciling against your card charge, use the final receipt, not the initial confirmation.
Walmart Business tax-exempt setup. If your business qualifies for sales tax exemption (non-profit, reseller with a valid resale certificate, government entity), Walmart Business supports tax-exempt purchasing after you submit your exemption documents. The receipt shows $0 sales tax when configured correctly. If the receipt is showing sales tax and you are supposed to be exempt, the setup is not complete. Worth checking on your first Walmart Business order.
Cash purchases. If you pay cash, Walmart cannot link the purchase to your account, so Receipt Finder does not see it and no email goes out. The paper receipt is the only record. For business use, do not pay cash at Walmart. Always use a registered card so every purchase is digitally captured.
When automation is not worth it
Honesty section: automation is not always the right call.
If you shop at Walmart once or twice a month for personal items and never need the receipts for anything, do not bother with any of this. Toss the paper receipt if you do not need it. Move on.
If you shop 5 to 10 times a month for a small side business or personal budgeting, manual download is workable. Bookmark walmart.com/orders, enable paperless receipts in your account, and spend 5 minutes a month going through the email receipts. Automation is overkill for this volume.
Automation earns its keep for landlords with multiple properties (each with its own maintenance receipt stream), for contractors buying supplies on every job site, for resellers sourcing inventory at retail, for catering and food service businesses, and for anyone running a real operation where Walmart is a regular supplier. Also earns its keep if you need the line-item data (not just totals) for sales tax reclaim, product cost tracking, or IRS deduction documentation.
Closing: pick a capture strategy and stick with it
The Walmart receipt landscape is fragmented. Four different paths (paper, email, app, walmart.com), three different account types (personal, Walmart+, Walmart Business), and no single source of truth that shows you everything at once. The manual approach works, but you will always have gaps, and the gaps tend to be exactly the receipts you need at tax time.
The fix is a capture strategy. Always pay with a registered card. Enable paperless email receipts in your account. If you run a business, switch to Walmart Business for B2B invoices with your company name. Connect your inbox to an automated system so the emailed receipts flow into your books without manual handling.
If you want to see what your current Walmart receipt stream actually looks like, start with the integrations page, connect an inbox, and let it pull the last 90 days. You will see every walmart.com order and every paperless in-store receipt in one list, and you will know how many gaps you have (the card charges without receipts) versus how many you already have covered.