![]() Choose the desired date range at the top left.Under Purchase History, click on "See All".From the Account menu in the menu bar choose "View My Account.".Sign in with your Apple ID if you aren't already (under the Account menu).Tap it, and a new copy of the receipt will be sent to the email address of your Apple ID. Scroll right to the bottom, and you will see a "Resent" button.Find the purchase you need the receipt for, and then tap on the row that says "Total Billed: $XX.XX" and has the rightward pointing chevron/arrow.Choose your time range as necessary by tapping on "Last 90 Days". ![]() Scroll down and tap on "Purchase History".Tap on the first item at the top that looks like this: "Apple ID: Choose "View Apple ID" from the list and authenticate if necessary.Tap on "iTunes & App Store" (it should show the email address of your App Store / iTunes account underneath).Tap on your name where it says "Apple ID, iCloud, iTunes & App Store" (it's the first item in the list).If your purchase is older however, I have found a way where you can request that a receipt for a purchase be emailed to you once again, but you cannot do it in your browser, it requires either an iOS device or a Mac with iTunes:įor iOS Devices (instructions as of iOS 11.4): If you go to and you are logged in with your Apple ID, you can view recent purchases, and print out the receipts, or email them to an address. ![]() Fortunately, Apple's Retail stores were not involved in the lawsuit, that were already been using the new e-mail receipts system, while the printed receipts did not include the prohibited data.If your purchase is within the last 90 days, you can view it online as follows: "According to the attorneys, federal law prohibits using more than the last five digits of a credit card and the card expiration date on a receipt," ifoAppleStore was reporting last year. ![]() The suit claimed that the credit card data exposed customers to identity-theft and fraud, although it admitted that all loss was "small and difficult to quantify." Last year, after adopting the new system for transactions, three Florida attorneys filed a federal lawsuit against the Cupertino folks for a receipt issued by one of its Web stores that included the expiration date of credit cards. The system seems to be working just fine, since no one is complaining. It is used to print a receipt for customers who either don't want to give their e-mail address to Apple (whatever their reason for that may be) or who simply don't have an e-mail address at all. The highlighted area shows the new small-sized printer. "Apple has installed tiny printers (highlighted area) beneath selected wooden display tables to allow employees to make hard copies of receipts, without walking to the rear of the store where receipt printers have previously been installed," notes theweb site that deals with news and information about Apple Inc.'s retail stores.Ĭlick on the image above to enlarge it. However, Apple hasn't dropped the printers for the receipts just yet, but has instead hidden them underneath certain wood display tables. Apple fans and frequent visitors of ifoAppleStore may recall that, sometime during 2006, Apple decided to drop traditional counters used only as the "cash register," swapping them for a more efficient, e-mail-based system handled by the Studio or Genius Bars at the store.
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