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Print 80 inkjet return address labels per sheet. Same layout as 5167, made for inkjet paper. Why free?
Printing Avery 8167 inkjet return address labels? This page gives you the 80-up US Letter layout with four columns, twenty rows, and 1/2 inch by 1 3/4 inch labels already dialed in. Type one address and repeat it across the sheet, or import a CSV. Avery 8167 is the inkjet version of the same layout used by Avery 5167.
Have laser labels instead? Use Avery 5167. Have Avery 5267, 8667, 18167, or another 80-up sheet? This layout should still match, but run a plain-paper test first.
Avery 8167 is a 1/2" x 1 3/4" inkjet label layout with 80 labels per US Letter sheet, arranged 4 columns by 20 rows. It is most often used for return address labels.
They share the same 80-up die-cut layout. 5167 sheets are optimized for laser printers and 8167 for inkjet printers. Templates are interchangeable.
Type the address once and use Tile / repeat, or edit one cell and choose Duplicate this cell to all cells.
Yes. Use Import CSV to map name, street, city, state, ZIP, and country columns. Each row becomes one multi-line label.
Set browser print scale to 100%, disable headers and footers, and test on plain paper before loading label sheets.
Two to three short lines: name, street, and city/state/ZIP. Auto-fit sizing shrinks the font so longer addresses stay on the label.
Yes. Use per-cell editing to blank out already-used positions before printing a partial sheet.
No. Text and CSV content stay in the browser. The page is static and does not store label data.
The grid starts 0.28125" from the left and 0.5" from the top; columns repeat every 2.0625" with a 5/16" gutter, and rows repeat every 0.5", flush - identical to laser-rated 5167 and 5267. This page reproduces those exact coordinates instead of dividing the sheet evenly, which is what keeps the last row from drifting off its die-cut.
Most printers feed paper a fraction of a millimeter off, and on label stock that shows. Use the Printer alignment panel to print a test sheet, hold it against a label sheet in front of a light, and nudge the layout in 0.25mm steps. The setting is saved for next time.
Usually feeding, not software. Feed label sheets one at a time from the manual or bypass tray if you have one, never run a sheet through twice, and store unused sheets flat in the packaging - humidity curls label stock, and a curled sheet feeds crooked.
Anything small: spice jar lids, medicine bottles, USB drives and chargers, hobby paint pots, seed packets, and price tags. Anywhere a bigger label would wrap or overhang, the 1/2" x 1 3/4" size sits flat.
Use the "labels" media setting so the printer lays down less ink at a slower feed, and skip light gray text - low contrast at six-point sizes vanishes. Black text on white stock is the readable default at this size.
Keep the remainder in the package, and next time blank out the used positions with per-cell editing before printing. The filled-count pill at the top of the tool shows exactly how many labels the run will use.
No. This template runs entirely in the browser - nothing to install, no account, no plug-in. It replaces the Word template workflow: the 8167 grid is already measured and locked, you just add content and print. It works the same on Windows, Mac, Chromebooks, and Linux.
Yes. Use Save to store the layout in your browser and Load to bring it back, or click Share this tool to copy a link that encodes your current layout. Returning visitors are also offered a restore of their last session automatically.
Yes - no watermark, no trial, no signup. The site is supported by optional affiliate links to printing supplies, so the template tool itself stays free.
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