Refunds
The Refunds page tracks returned merchandise -- items that customers brought back for a refund. Monitoring refunds helps you spot product quality issues, potential abuse, and trends in customer returns.
Refund List
The page displays individual refund transactions with the following details:
| Column | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Date | The business date when the refund was processed |
| Terminal | Which register handled the return |
| Cashier | The cashier who processed the refund |
| Amount | The dollar amount refunded to the customer |
Filtering
Use the date range picker to focus on a specific time period. The refund list respects the same date range used on all other pages.
How to Use Refund Data
Track return rates
Compare your total refund amount to your total sales. A refund rate above 2-3% may be worth investigating. Some departments naturally have higher return rates (e.g., produce due to spoilage), while others should have very few returns.
Identify product issues
If you see repeated refunds for items from the same department or category, there may be a product quality or freshness issue that needs attention.
Monitor for return fraud
While most returns are legitimate, patterns to watch for include:
- High-frequency returns by the same cashier
- Returns without a corresponding original sale in the system
- Returns processed at unusual hours when supervision is lighter
Reconcile with your return policy
Use the data to verify that your store's return policy is being followed consistently across all cashiers and shifts.
The refund amounts shown in StorePulse come directly from the return transactions recorded in ENCOR. They represent the dollar value of items returned, not the number of items.