Purchase Receipts
Audience: Purchasing team, warehouse managers, receiving clerks
Overview
A purchase receipt is a transaction that records goods received from a supplier. This increases your inventory and represents items entering the business.
Key Point: Purchase receipts create inventory—items that didn't exist in your system now do.
What is a Purchase Receipt?
Definition
A transaction that records:
- What was received (items and quantities)
- From whom (supplier/vendor)
- When it arrived
- Where it was received (location)
- Why (purchase order reference or invoice)
Examples
- Receiving 500 bottles from supplier
- Accepting delivery of 100 liters of fragrance oil
- Unloading shipment of packaging materials
Purchase Receipt Workflow
Real-World Example
Scenario: Receiving Fragrance Oil
Background:
- Ordered 50 liters of Rose Fragrance Oil from supplier
- Purchase Order: PO-2024-1234
- Supplier Invoice: INV-SUP-5678
Delivery Arrives:
- Truck arrives at receiving dock
- Warehouse clerk inspects delivery
- 10 containers × 5 liters each = 50 liters total
- Matches purchase order ✓
Purchase Receipt Created:
- Item: Rose Fragrance Oil
- Quantity: 50 liters
- Unit: Liters
- Location: Receiving Dock
- Supplier: Fragrance Supplies Inc.
- Invoice Number: INV-SUP-5678
- PO Reference: PO-2024-1234
- Date: October 28, 2024
- Received By: John Smith (Warehouse Clerk)
Inventory Impact:
Before Receipt:
Rose Fragrance Oil: 20 liters
After Receipt:
Rose Fragrance Oil: 70 liters (+50)
Next Steps:
- Quality inspection (move to Quarantine)
- After QC pass → Move to Storage
- Now available for production
What Gets Recorded
Basic Information
-
Items Received
- Item name/number
- Quantity
- Unit of measure
-
Supplier Information
- Supplier/vendor name
- Invoice number
- Purchase order reference
-
Location
- Where items were received (usually Receiving Dock)
-
Dates
- Delivery date
- Transaction date
-
Authorization
- Who received the goods
- Who created the receipt transaction
Optional Information
- Packing slip number
- Shipping carrier
- Tracking number
- Container/pallet count
- Notes or comments
Types of Purchase Receipts
1. Full Receipt
Definition: Received everything ordered
Example:
- Ordered: 100 bottles
- Received: 100 bottles ✓
Result: Purchase order fully closed
2. Partial Receipt
Definition: Received less than ordered (backorder)
Example:
- Ordered: 100 bottles
- Received: 60 bottles (supplier backordered 40)
Result: Receipt created for 60, purchase order remains open for 40
3. Over Receipt
Definition: Received more than ordered
Example:
- Ordered: 100 bottles
- Received: 110 bottles (supplier sent extra)
Decision:
- Accept all 110: Adjust PO or invoice
- Accept only 100: Return 10 to supplier
- Reject entire shipment: If not authorized
4. Return/Rejection
Definition: Refused delivery due to damage or quality issues
Example:
- Received: 100 bottles
- Inspection: 20 bottles damaged
- Action: Create receipt for 80, reject 20
Result: Supplier credits or re-ships 20
Business Scenarios
Scenario 1: Standard Receipt (QC Required)
Steps:
- Create purchase receipt at Receiving Dock
- Move to Quarantine (automatic or manual)
- Quality inspection
- If pass → Move to Storage (available for use)
Scenario 2: Direct to Storage (No QC)
Steps:
- Create purchase receipt at Receiving Dock
- Move directly to Storage (no QC needed)
- Immediately available for use
Use Case: Trusted supplier, non-critical items
Scenario 3: Partial Receipt
Order: 1,000 bottles Received: 600 bottles (400 backordered)
Receipt #1:
- Quantity: 600 bottles
- Status: Partial receipt
- PO Status: Open (awaiting 400 more)
Later... Receipt #2:
- Quantity: 400 bottles
- Status: Final receipt
- PO Status: Closed (fully received)
Integration with Purchasing
Purchase Order Connection
Typical Flow:
- Create Purchase Order (in purchasing system)
- Supplier ships goods
- Create Purchase Receipt (in inventory system)
- Supplier Invoice arrives (in accounts payable)
Three-Way Matching
Finance Process: Match three documents before paying
- Purchase Order: What we ordered
- Purchase Receipt: What we received
- Supplier Invoice: What supplier is charging
All must match before payment is approved
Example:
PO: 100 bottles @ $10 = $1,000
Receipt: 95 bottles (5 damaged)
Invoice: $1,000
Action: Request credit for 5 bottles ($50) before payment
Business Rules
Rule 1: Items Must Be Stockable
Valid:
- Receiving 100 bottles of perfume ✓
Invalid:
- Receiving "consulting service" ✗
Why: Services don't have physical inventory
See: Stockable Items
Rule 2: Receipt Increases Inventory
Before Receipt:
- Lavender Oil: 20 liters
After Receipt (+50 liters):
- Lavender Oil: 70 liters
Inventory goes UP (this is a fundamental characteristic of receipts)
Rule 3: Receipts Are Immutable
Once created, receipts cannot be edited.
If mistake:
- Create a return/credit transaction
- Or create a stock adjustment
Why: Audit trail, financial accuracy
Rule 4: Must Specify Location
Invalid: "Received 100 bottles" (where?)
Valid: "Received 100 bottles at Receiving Dock"
Why: Every item must have a location
Common Questions
Q: Can I receive items without a purchase order?
A: Depends on company policy.
Best Practice: Always have a PO for tracking and approval
Exception: Emergency purchases, samples, returns from customers (different transaction type)
Q: What if the supplier sends the wrong item?
A: Options:
- Reject delivery: Don't create receipt, return to supplier
- Accept and return later: Create receipt, then create return transaction
- Accept as substitute: Create receipt with note, inform purchasing
Q: Do I need to count every item?
A: Recommended for accuracy, especially for:
- High-value items
- Large quantities
- New suppliers
May skip for:
- Trusted, long-term suppliers
- Small quantities
- Sealed, pre-counted packages
Q: What if items are damaged in transit?
A: Options:
- Refuse entire shipment: Don't create receipt
- Partial receipt: Receive good items only, note damaged quantity
- Receive all, then adjust: Receipt all, then stock adjustment for damaged (creates clear audit trail)
Document damage for supplier claim
Q: Can I receive to multiple locations at once?
A: Depends on system.
Best Practice: Receive to one location (Receiving), then move to final destinations
Why: Clear receiving process, better tracking
Best Practices
1. Inspect Before Accepting
Always Check:
- Quantity matches packing slip
- No visible damage
- Correct items (not substitutes)
- Expiry dates (if applicable)
Never: Blindly accept deliveries
2. Document Discrepancies
If anything wrong:
- Note on packing slip
- Photograph damage
- Get driver signature on discrepancy note
- Document in receipt transaction
Why: Supplier claims, insurance
3. Match to Purchase Order
Before creating receipt:
- Find corresponding PO
- Verify items, quantities, supplier
- Check for special instructions
If no PO:
- Contact purchasing before accepting
- Don't receive unauthorized goods
4. Create Receipts Promptly
Timing: Create receipt same day as delivery
Why:
- Inventory accuracy
- Timely putaway
- Financial reporting (inventory value)
Don't: Let deliveries sit unprocessed
5. Use Consistent Receiving Location
Setup: Designate one receiving area
Examples:
- Receiving Dock
- Inbound Staging Area
Benefit: Easy to find recently received items, clear workflow
Receiving Metrics
Receipt Accuracy
Month: October 2024
Total Receipts: 250
Discrepancies Found: 15
Accuracy Rate: 94%
Types of Discrepancies:
- Quantity short: 8
- Damaged goods: 5
- Wrong items: 2
Supplier Performance
Supplier Receipts Issues Rating
────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Fragrance Supplies Inc. 45 2 95.6%
Bottle Co. 38 5 86.8%
Packaging Plus 32 1 96.9%
Average Processing Time
Metric Time
─────────────────────────────────
Delivery to Receipt: 2.5 hours
Receipt to Putaway: 4.0 hours
Total Cycle: 6.5 hours
Goal: Minimize time from delivery to available inventory
Integration with Other Concepts
Stock Movements
After Receipt: Move from Receiving → Quarantine or Storage
See: Stock Movements
Finance Integration
Impact: Receipts increase inventory asset value
See: Finance Integration
Purchasing Integration
Connection: Receipts close purchase orders
Related Concepts
- Inventory Basics - Foundation concepts
- Stockable Items - What can be received
- Stock Movements - Moving after receipt
- Location Purposes - Receiving vs Storage
- Purchasing Integration - PO connection
Last Updated: 2025-10-28