It is a chronic problem, unfortunately. Different photo editing software has different capabilities. I scan my receipts and save as a jpg. With my photo editing software I maximize the 'contrast' and keep my fingers crossed. I may take a receipt through two full cycles of maximizing the 'contrast'. If I still don't have an acceptable product I will try taking a photo of the receipt and play with it with the photo editing software in hopes that my camera was more sensitive than the scanner. When worse comes to worst, I print a copy of my very best image and to the side (NOT ON THE RECEIPT ITSELF) transcribe what is printed on the receipt. Then I scan that and submit it with a note that explains what I have done and that the original can be mailed to them if needed. They have never asked me to mail the receipt.
There is one company that suggests you trace over the characters on the receipt, but I would never ever do that! With my luck I would accidentally forget which company I am dealing with and trace over one for a company that would automatically reject the receipt as 'tampered with'. That is why I go for the side-by-side with the best possible receipt and the handwritten transcription to the side.
The ones that drive me nuts are the heat sensitive paper ones where the print disappears if the receipt gets wet. I have had restaurant shops where the server dropped one of those on the table into a puddle. There I have asked for a fresh receipt that 'accounting can read when I submit my expense report'.
Most cases you really can't ask for a reprint, but if it is really really faint I would certainly try. And as a real customer I would insist on a legible receipt, so why not as a shopper? A glance at the receipt before you leave the register should let you know if it is within your ability to recover the information to submit.
Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 08/04/2011 09:57PM by Flash.