This article is for anyone who needs to understand the Voids.

Voids are payments that have been removed from the payment. This removes that payment and that payment amount from a sale.

Common valid reasons for voids

To void a payment a few conditions have to be met.

How to void a payment :

Sale is rung up and cashier clicks Pay.

Customer says they will pay by check so the check button is clicked. This adds the check payment to the Payments field. Client realises they have the business checkbook and not their personal checkbook so needs to switch payment method. The cashier has already clicked the check button so will need to click the grey X next to that payment to void out that payment.

When clicking the X a warning will popup about voiding the payment and how this cannot be undone. The cashier will click Yes to void the payment.

After voiding out that payment the balance due returns to the full amount that was originally due. Any fees related to the voided payment method is also removed from the payment and from the Total Due (in the example this removes the check fee).

The cashier then adds in any other payment methods that the customer chooses to use to complete the sale. A receipt is generated that shows the payment used to complete the sale and the is no mention of the voided payment. Voided payments will not affect the final sale or payments. The sale total still has to be met for the sale to complete.

A record of the voided payment is kept in the system. All voided payments can be viewed in the Voided Payments (xls).

This can be accessed by :

  1. Opening the Cash Register.

  2. Clicking on the Reports button.

  3. Selecting the Voided Payments (xls) report in the Report Categories list.

  4. Selecting the location if there are multiple locations.

  5. Setting the period. Choosing Custom will bring up calendar select drop-down menus.

  6. Clicking Generate Report when location and period have been selected.

The xls report will be generated. There will be a Summary sheet and a Details sheet. In the example, I am using Libreoffice so it may look a little different from Excel (Microsoft Office) and Numbers (Mac). You may see a large number of Astro Offer Rebate voided payments. This is due to the rebate being a payment that are automatically applied but if the cashier clicks the Back to Sale button to either add or subtract items, the system has to remove the Astro Offer Rebates by voiding them. They are then added back onto the sale when the cashier has made the changes needed and hits the Pay button again.

The Summary sheet :

This sheet will display the location, employee, a summed number of voids, a summed total of the value of the voids, and what type of payment type the void was. All of these will be combined into 1 line per employee.

The Details Sheet will list the individual voids at the time they occurred. The amount and type is also listed. The Astros can be ignored but additional coaching my be needed for any employees who have large numbers of other payment type voids.

Please note that the Subtotal at the bottom may not show up on LibreOffice due to a known bug with Libre. You can have Libre recalculate any subtotals by selecting a filter, saving it and then unselecting the filter. Libre correctly recalculates the subtotal once a different filter has been applied.

Numbers on a Mac do not support the Auto-Filter feature.