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Inventory Adjustments

An inventory adjustment corrects a discrepancy between what your system says you have and what is physically in your warehouse. Adjustments are a normal part of warehouse operations — they account for damage, shrinkage, counting errors, expiry, and other real-world events.

Adjustment Types

Each adjustment is categorized by the reason for the correction:

TypeWhen to use it
Cycle CountDiscrepancies found during a scheduled cycle count.
Physical InventoryCorrections from a full warehouse-wide physical count.
DamageItems damaged in storage, during handling, or in transit.
ShrinkageUnexplained inventory loss (packaging errors, unrecorded breakage, minor discrepancies).
ObsoleteItems that are no longer sellable or usable and should be written off.
CorrectionA manual fix for a data entry error or system issue.
FoundItems discovered that were not previously recorded (e.g., found during reorganization).
ExpiredItems that have passed their expiry date and must be removed from available stock.
TheftConfirmed inventory theft.
Return to VendorItems being sent back to the supplier (e.g., defective goods).

Adjustment Lifecycle

Adjustments follow an approval workflow to ensure accountability:

DRAFT --> PENDING APPROVAL --> APPROVED --> POSTED
                           \-> CANCELLED
StatusWhat it means
DraftThe adjustment is being prepared. Line items and quantities can still be edited.
Pending ApprovalThe adjustment has been submitted and is waiting for a manager or supervisor to review it.
ApprovedA manager has reviewed and approved the adjustment.
PostedThe adjustment has been applied to stock levels. This is final — stock quantities are updated and a journal entry is created.
CancelledThe adjustment was cancelled. No changes to stock.

Creating an Adjustment

  1. Go to Adjustments in the sidebar under Inventory and click Add Adjustment.
  2. Fill in:
    • Adjustment Number — a unique reference (e.g., ADJ-2026-001).
    • Warehouse — the warehouse where the adjustment applies.
    • Adjustment Type — the reason for the correction (damage, shrinkage, cycle count, etc.).
    • Adjustment Date — the date of the correction.
    • Reference Number — an optional external reference.
    • Reason — a description of why the adjustment is needed.
  3. Save the adjustment in Draft status.
  4. Submit it for approval when ready.

Adjustment Lines

Each adjustment contains one or more lines, each representing a specific item being adjusted:

  • Expected Quantity — what the system says you should have.
  • Actual Quantity — what was physically counted or observed.
  • Adjustment Quantity — the difference (calculated automatically).
  • Variance Percentage — how far off the count was from expectations.
  • Reason Code — a specific reason for this particular line’s discrepancy.
  • Cost Impact — the financial impact of the adjustment.

Approval Workflow

Adjustments require approval before they affect stock levels. This prevents unauthorized changes and creates an accountability chain:

  1. The warehouse worker creates the adjustment and submits it for approval.
  2. A supervisor or manager reviews the adjustment, its line items, and the stated reason.
  3. The approver can approve (allowing it to be posted) or reject (sending it back for revision).
  4. Once approved, the adjustment is posted — stock levels are updated and a permanent journal entry is created.

Tip: For high-value adjustments (e.g., above 50,000 DA), consider requiring a second level of approval. The system supports multi-level approval workflows where different threshold amounts require different approvers.