POS shift open, close, and cash reconciliation
A shift is the unit of accountability at the POS — one waiter, one POS Point, from open-cash-count to close-cash-count. Done right, end-of-shift takes 3 minutes and produces a signed report. Done sloppy, you spend the next morning hunting for a missing 1,500 ALL. This article is the protocol.
Opening a shift
- Before logging in, count the physical cash drawer. Bills + coins, per currency. Write the number down — you'll type it in.
- Open the POS app, go to your shift screen (My Shift), enter the counted starting balance, click Open Shift.
- The system records the timestamp and starts tracking every order and payment under your user. The elapsed-time counter starts.
- If the previous shift didn't close cleanly (drawer count is off, system shows an unclosed shift), close that one first. Don't open on top of an open shift — the variance from the previous shift will silently roll into yours.
During the shift
- Take orders and payments normally. Every cash payment goes in the drawer; every card payment goes through the terminal.
- If you give cash from the drawer for a non-sale reason (paying a delivery, petty cash), record it in the system as a cash payout — otherwise your end-of-shift count will be short by exactly that amount.
- Tips: if you put cash tips in the drawer (vs a separate jar), they will count as cash over at the end of shift. Talk to your manager about which model your venue uses.
- Mid-shift, you can drop excess cash to the safe (cash drop) and record it. The drawer should never get so full that it's a theft target.
Closing the shift
- Stop taking new orders. Finalize and close any open tables.
- Recount the drawer. Per currency. Write the numbers down.
- Open the close-shift screen. Enter actual balance per currency.
- The system shows the expected balance (starting + cash sales − cash refunds − cash payouts − cash drops) and the variance (actual − expected). Negative variance = short. Positive = over.
- If the variance is small (a few hundred ALL / a few euros) and you can't trace it on the spot, close the shift and let the manager review tomorrow. Don't artificially adjust the count.
- Click Close Shift. The Z report (shift report) generates and prints.
- Drop the closing-balance cash to the safe, leaving the next-shift float. Sign the printed Z report and place it in the day's binder.
What's on the Z report
- Waiter name + POS Point + open/close timestamps + elapsed.
- Total orders count, total revenue (gross + tax breakdown).
- Per-payment-method totals: cash, card, room charge, etc.
- Cash reconciliation: starting balance, cash sales, refunds, payouts, drops, expected, actual, variance — per currency.
- Voids and refunds processed during the shift (with reasons if entered).
- Tips collected (cash + card).
Reviewing past shifts
Reports → Shift Report shows every closed shift filterable by waiter, POS Point, and date range. Useful for: investigating a variance after the fact, computing tips per waiter for payroll, spotting patterns (one waiter consistently short by 200–500 ALL is a conversation, possibly a training issue, possibly worse). Each shift in the list links to the original Z report.
Auto-close behavior
If a waiter forgets to close (rare, but it happens — busy night, walked out without clicking), the shift stays open. The next morning, a manager closes it manually from Reports → Shift Report. The system asks for the closing balance just like the waiter would have, but logs the closer's name. Treat this as a process miss to fix, not a normal pattern.
Frequently asked questions
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