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    Wifi / Mobile Bill
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Wifi & Mobile Bill Generator

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Your Information
Step 1 of 4

Company Name

Company Street Address
Company City, State Zip Code

Account Number
Invoice Number 0000000000
Statement Date MM/DD/YYYY
Due Date MM/DD/YYYY
Service for

Your Name

Your Street Address
Your City, State Zip Code

Total amount due $0.00 Payment due by MM/DD/YYYY
Billing period Start Date Year to End Date Year

Bill summary

Balance from last bill $0.00
Payment received -$0.00
Account charges and credits $0.00
Monthly service charges $0.00
Equipment charges $0.00
Other charges and credits $0.00
Taxes and fees $0.00
Total amount due $0.00
Manage your account Company Website
Customer service Customer Service Number
Pay by phone #PMT (#768)

Detach and return this section with payment

Your Name

Your Street Address
Your City, State Zip Code

Account

Due dateMM/DD/YYYY

Amount due$0.00

Amount enclosed$ __________

Company Name Company Street Address, Company City, State Zip Code

00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

Putting together a wifi, mobile, or internet bill sample usually means wrestling with a layout in a word processor until it looks close enough. This skips that. Enter the details, choose one of the layouts, and the statement builds in front of you as you type. Once it reads the way you want, save it as a PDF. No account is needed to get going, and building and previewing your bill is free.

People come here for ordinary reasons, a design mockup, a classroom handout, a record they want to keep tidy. The output mirrors the look of a real statement, though it isn't issued by a carrier and isn't tied to any account. That distinction matters, and there's a section on it further down.

What shows up on a wifi or mobile bill

Internet and phone statements tend to share a skeleton once you spot the pattern. Up top you'll find the provider, your account number, the statement date, and the stretch of days the charges cover. The middle is where the real information lives, and it's worth slowing down for.

Start with the account summary. It carries over last month's balance, subtracts anything you've already paid, adds the new charges, and lands on the total due. Under that, the charges split apart. Your plan charge is the headline number, the flat monthly cost of the service. If you rent a router or you're paying off a phone in installments, that shows as a separate equipment or device line, which catches people off guard when their bill runs higher than the advertised plan.

Then come the extras you opted into, things like device protection, an international calling pack, or a data add-on. Taxes and government fees sit near the bottom and aren't negotiable. The line worth actually reading is the carrier surcharge. It's dressed up to look like a tax, but it's the company's own fee rather than a government charge, and it quietly pads the total. Payment instructions and a customer service number usually close out the page.

Here's how those pieces sit together on a typical statement.

A sample broadband statement. The provider and the numbers are made up.
Brightwave Internet
Account 4471-0098  ·  Statement date Mar 4, 2026  ·  Billing period Feb 1 to Feb 28, 2026
Service for
Jordan Avery, 218 Larch Street Apt 4, Maple City, OR 97000
Account summary
Previous balance$79.99
Payment received-$79.99
New charges$84.20
Total due by Mar 22, 2026$84.20
This month's charges
Internet plan, 300 Mbps$65.00
Equipment rental, router$12.00
Taxes and government fees$4.20
Network surcharge$3.00
Total$84.20
Ways to pay
Online at brightwave.example or by phone at the number on your account

Mobile bills run on the same logic, with a few wording changes. The plan charge covers your talk, text, and data, the device line shows an installment if you're financing a handset, and you'll often see one charge per line on a family account. As for the money itself, recent industry figures put broadband somewhere around $72 to $89 a month and the average US cell phone bill close to $141, so the totals on a believable sample should land in that neighborhood rather than at round, suspiciously clean numbers.

Is wifi a utility bill, and what about your phone?

The honest answer is that it depends on who's asking and what they need it for. For everyday budgeting, taxes, and expense tracking, internet and phone bills usually get filed right alongside electricity, gas, and water. Plenty of people, and plenty of accountants, treat a home broadband line or a cell plan as a utility cost without a second thought.

Proof of address is a different story. Banks, landlords, and the financial or crypto platforms that run identity checks often won't take a wifi or mobile bill, because those services are simple to set up under any name and get classed as communication or subscription services rather than traditional utilities. So your internet statement can live in the utilities column of your monthly budget and still get waved off as a residency document. If something has to be accepted for verification, read the institution's exact list first, since what counts shifts from one place to the next.

Why people build sample bills

The reasons are practical more often than not. Designers and developers need realistic documents to test an upload flow, a layout, or a parser, and grabbing a stranger's real bill isn't an option. A landlord might want to show a prospective tenant a rough idea of monthly costs, plainly marked as an example. Small operators who bill for shared internet like having a clean, consistent format to hand out. Teachers use sample statements for lessons on reading a bill or building a budget. And some folks just want a neat copy of their own figures for a personal file.

Building your bill

The form moves through four short steps, and the preview keeps pace the whole way.

  1. Add your name, address, and an optional logo.
  2. Fill in the provider name and address.
  3. Set the billing dates, the account and invoice numbers, the previous balance, and this month's charges.
  4. Drop in the provider website and a contact number.

After that, scan the live preview, switch templates if another layout suits you better, and download the finished PDF.

Pick a template, change what you need

Three layouts come ready to use, and you can flip between them without redoing your work. Every field is editable, so names, dates, usage figures, and totals update the moment you change them. Upload a logo if you want the header to match a particular look. When you're done, save the file as a PDF, PNG, or DOCX, whichever travels best for what you're doing. Skip the sign-in and nothing you type is stored, which keeps the whole thing in your hands.

What these documents are, and what they're not

This is the part worth reading slowly. Everything you make here is a sample, meant for mockups, testing, learning, and keeping your own records straight. None of it is issued or verified by a real provider. So it shouldn't stand in as proof of address, proof of identity, proof of account ownership, or anything official, and it certainly shouldn't be used to mislead anyone. Since wifi and phone bills tend to get rejected for verification anyway, leaning on a sample for that is a dead end twice over. If you need a genuine or duplicate copy of a real bill, sign in to your provider's account portal or call them, and they'll send the actual statement.

Questions people ask

Is wifi a utility bill?

For budgeting and tax purposes, most people group it with their utilities. As a residency document it's shakier, since a lot of institutions won't accept a wifi bill for address verification.

What about a phone bill, does that count?

Same idea. A cell or landline bill reads as a utility on a household budget, but plenty of banks and landlords won't take it as proof of where you live. Check what the specific organization asks for.

Can I see what a wifi bill looks like first?

Yes. There's a labeled sample further up the page that breaks down each section, from the account summary down to the surcharge line.

Does any of this cost money?

Building and previewing your bill is free, and you can do it without an account. You only sign in when you want to save or download a finished copy.

Do I have to create an account?

Not to build or preview one. An account only comes into play if you want to keep your files or come back to them later.

Which file formats can I download?

PDF, PNG, and DOCX. PDF prints cleanly, PNG works well for slides or mockups, and DOCX lets you keep editing in a word processor.

Can I change the details and add my own logo?

Every field is editable and you can upload a logo. The preview redraws as you go, so there's no guessing how the final version will look.

Is anything I enter saved?

If you're not signed in, no. Your entries stay on your screen and aren't stored on our end. Privacy Policy.

Can I use a sample to verify my address somewhere?

No. These aren't valid for verification or any official use, and wifi and phone bills are commonly turned down for that anyway. For a document that's accepted, ask your provider for an official copy.

I lost my real internet bill. Will this get me a copy?

It won't, because the generator isn't connected to your account and can't pull a real statement. Log in to your provider's portal or give them a call to get the actual one reissued. Contact us.

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