How to Find a Lost Dollar Tree Receipt
Misplaced your Dollar Tree receipt? Before you give up, there are a few quick places to look — and if the original is gone for good, you can recreate one for your records.
Where to look first
- 1Check your email — Dollar Tree and many retailers send a digital receipt or order confirmation at checkout.
- 2Check your email for a digital Dollar Tree receipt, and open the Dollar Tree app or loyalty account to view recent purchases.
- 3Review your bank or credit-card statement to confirm the date, location and exact amount of the purchase.
- 4Contact Dollar Tree customer service with your payment card, the store or location, and the approximate date — they can sometimes look up or reprint a receipt.
Can't find your Dollar Tree receipt? Recreate it
If the original is unrecoverable, you can recreate a Dollar Tree receipt that matches the items, prices, date and store details of your real purchase — handy for an expense report, reimbursement or your own bookkeeping. Open the free Dollar Tree receipt builder, fill in the details, and download it as a PDF or PNG.
Use it responsibly
Only recreate a receipt for a purchase that actually happened and for legitimate purposes such as personal records, reimbursement of real expenses, or replacing a lost copy. Creating a receipt to mislead a person, employer, retailer or tax authority is illegal.
Recreate your Dollar Tree receipt now
Match the items, prices, date and store details — then download as PDF or PNG.
Open the Dollar Tree receipt builderFrequently asked questions
- Can I get a copy of an old Dollar Tree receipt?
- Often yes — check your email, your Dollar Tree app or online account, and your card statement. For older purchases, Dollar Tree customer service may be able to look up the transaction with your card and the date.
- Does Dollar Tree keep receipts on file?
- It varies. Purchases made through a Dollar Tree app, loyalty program or online account are usually stored in your order history. In-store cash purchases are the hardest to retrieve, which is when recreating a receipt for your records is most useful.