Question
How do refunds and adjustments affect sales reports in Toast?
Answer
Managing refunds and adjustments is critical to ensuring accurate sales reporting in Toast. Refunds impact your sales reporting in the following ways:
Sales Reports: Refunds are reported on the day they are processed, and the refund amounts appear as negative values in the sales reports. For example, a refund processed on May 15th for -$15 would reduce the sales total for that day, ensuring that sales and refunds are balanced.
Cash Drawers: For cash refunds, the refund amount is deducted from the cash drawer on the day of processing. If the refunded order is re-entered, the payment is logged under the current date unless adjusted to reflect the original date.
Profit and Loss Reporting: Refunds appear on the refund report and sales summary, reflecting a negative impact on cash sales for the refund day but aligning with accurate reporting.
If a refund causes a negative balance in a check or a sales report, adjust the payment to reflect the correct balance if it hasn’t been captured/batched. If the payment is already captured, you can either add voided items back to the check to close it, or add an item that offsets the negative balance.
When a manual cash refund is issued and does not immediately adjust the expected cash amount or sales report, completely void the original ticket rather than issuing a refund to update the expected cash amount. Allow up to 2 hours for the adjusted cash amount to appear accurately in sales reports.
Cash refunds recorded on a different day than the original sale can lead to discrepancies in bank deposits. To avoid this, process cash refunds on the same business date as the original transaction whenever possible. Confirm cash drawer records to ensure accuracy if the refund spans multiple days.
At present, refunds cannot be retroactively removed from sales reports. If a refund was applied in error, inform your finance contact to account for the discrepancy externally. Re-entering the refund may affect current-day sales totals and should be approached with caution.