
Walmart Snacks & Soda Receipt Example
This receipt shows a budget-friendly snack run at Walmart — party chips and two 2-liter sodas for under $9. It demonstrates how Walmart formats brand-name snacks alongside Great Value store-brand beverages. All items are taxable (X) since they are packaged snack foods and carbonated drinks.
Receipt Breakdown
What Makes This Receipt Realistic
- • Full product name with size (14.5 OZ BAG) matching real Walmart format
- • Great Value store-brand soda alternatives (Dr Thunder = Dr Pepper, Mountain Lightning = Mountain Dew)
- • All items marked X (taxable) — snack foods and sodas are taxed in most states
- • Low-total quick purchase typical of convenience runs
- • Long product descriptions wrapping across multiple receipt lines
Frequently Asked Questions
What are Great Value store brand equivalents?
Great Value is Walmart's primary store brand. Dr Thunder is the equivalent of Dr Pepper, Mountain Lightning is Mountain Dew, and similar alternatives exist for most major brand products. They appear on receipts with the GREAT VALUE prefix.
Are snacks and soda taxed at Walmart?
Yes. Packaged snacks like chips and carbonated beverages are marked X (taxable) on Walmart receipts in most states. Only unprepared grocery items like fresh produce and raw ingredients are typically tax-exempt (marked N).
How does Walmart format long product names on receipts?
Long product names wrap across multiple lines on Walmart thermal receipt paper. The price and tax code always appear on the first line, right-aligned, regardless of how many lines the description takes.