Refunds and returns are a normal part of trading. Whether a customer returns faulty goods, you overcharge on an invoice or a service does not meet the agreed specification, the accounting treatment must reverse the original sale correctly and adjust the VAT position.

The key document in this process is the credit note , which formally reduces or cancels the amount originally invoiced.

When refunds and returns arise

ReasonCommon inDocument issued
Goods returned as faulty or not as describedRetail, e-commerce, wholesaleCredit note
Goods returned under cooling-off period (distance selling)E-commerce, mail orderCredit note
Overcharge or pricing error on an invoiceAny sectorCredit note
Duplicate invoice raisedAny sectorCredit note
Agreed discount applied after the original invoiceB2B, wholesaleCredit note
Partial delivery – goods not receivedWholesale, manufacturingCredit note for undelivered portion
Service not performed or partially performedProfessional services, constructionCredit note

Accounting entries for a refund

A refund reverses the original sale. The journal entries depend on whether the customer was refunded to their original payment method or received a credit against future purchases.

Full refund (original payment method)

AccountDebitCredit
Revenue (sales)Net amount
VAT liability (output tax)VAT amount
BankGross amount

This reduces your reported revenue, reduces your VAT liability and reduces your bank balance.

Credit note (balance applied to customer account)

AccountDebitCredit
Revenue (sales)Net amount
VAT liability (output tax)VAT amount
Accounts receivableGross amount

The customer’s outstanding balance is reduced rather than cash being paid out. This is common in B2B transactions where the credit is offset against the next invoice.

Returning goods to stock

If the returned goods are in resaleable condition, you also need to reverse the cost of goods sold entry:

AccountDebitCredit
Stock (inventory)Cost of goods
Cost of goods soldCost of goods

If the goods are damaged and cannot be resold, they are written off to a stock write-off or returns expense account instead of being returned to stock.

VAT treatment

Adjusting output VAT

When you issue a credit note for a VAT-inclusive sale, you must reduce the output VAT you have charged. This is done on your next VAT return :

  • In Box 1 (VAT due on sales), reduce the figure by the VAT on the credit note
  • In Box 6 (total value of sales), reduce by the net value of the credit note

Credit notes as valid VAT documents

HMRC requires credit notes to contain:

  • The words “credit note” (or a clear indication that it is a credit note)
  • Your business name, address and VAT registration number
  • The customer’s name and address
  • The credit note number (sequential)
  • The date of issue
  • A reference to the original invoice number
  • A description of the goods or services being credited
  • The quantity and value being credited
  • The VAT rate and amount being credited
  • The total credit amount

Without a valid credit note, you cannot adjust the VAT on the original invoice.

Input VAT for the customer

When a customer receives a credit note, they must reduce the input VAT they have reclaimed. The credit note effectively reverses part or all of the VAT recovery they claimed on the original purchase.

Consumer rights and refund obligations

Consumer Rights Act 2015

The Consumer Rights Act 2015 sets out the legal framework for returns and refunds in B2C transactions:

Time periodConsumer’s rightBusiness obligation
Within 30 days of purchaseShort-term right to reject faulty goodsFull refund
After 30 days, within 6 monthsRight to repair or replacement; if that fails, right to rejectRepair/replace, then full refund if that fails (no deduction for use)
After 6 monthsRight to repair or replacement; if that fails, partial refundRepair/replace, then partial refund (may deduct for use)

For goods that are not faulty, businesses are not legally required to offer a refund unless the goods were bought at a distance (online, phone, mail order).

Consumer Contracts Regulations 2013

For distance sales (online, phone, catalogue), consumers have a 14-day cooling-off period from the date they receive the goods. They can return goods for any reason within this period and are entitled to a full refund, including standard delivery costs. The refund must be processed within 14 days of receiving the returned goods.

Distance selling ruleDetail
Cooling-off period14 days from receipt of goods
Refund deadlineWithin 14 days of receiving returned goods
Who pays return postageThe consumer, unless your terms say otherwise
ExemptionsPersonalised goods, perishables, sealed hygiene products opened by consumer

Recording returns in your accounts

Sales returns journal

If you have a high volume of returns, use a separate sales returns (or returns inward) account rather than posting credits directly against revenue. This lets you track return rates and identify problems:

  • High return rates on a specific product may indicate a quality issue
  • Seasonal return patterns help with stock planning
  • Excessive returns from a particular customer may signal abuse of your returns policy

Debit notes from customers

In some B2B situations, the customer issues a debit note to you rather than waiting for a credit note. This is the customer’s formal request for a credit. You should still issue your own credit note for your records and VAT purposes, cross-referencing the customer’s debit note.

Impact on financial statements

StatementEffect of returns
Profit and lossRevenue is reduced by the net value of credit notes; cost of goods sold is reduced if stock is returned to inventory
Balance sheetAccounts receivable is reduced; stock may increase; VAT liability is reduced
Cash flow statementCash outflows increase if refunds are paid in cash; no immediate cash effect if applied as account credits
VAT returnOutput VAT in Box 1 is reduced; net sales in Box 6 are reduced

Refund fraud

Refund fraud costs UK retailers billions of pounds annually. Common types include:

  • Returning stolen goods for a refund
  • Wardrobing – buying clothing, wearing it and returning it
  • Receipt manipulation – using someone else’s receipt or a fabricated receipt
  • Returning cheaper substitutes – swapping expensive items for cheaper ones in the same packaging

Mitigate refund fraud with clear policies, proof-of-purchase requirements, time limits, condition checks on returned goods and monitoring of customers with unusual return patterns.

Practical steps

  1. Issue credit notes promptly – delays create confusion and disputes
  2. Reference the original invoice on every credit note
  3. Adjust your VAT return in the period the credit note is issued
  4. Update your stock records if goods are returned to inventory
  5. Track return rates by product, customer and reason
  6. Document your returns policy clearly on your website and terms of business
  7. Train staff on the Consumer Rights Act so they know when a refund is legally required
  8. Reconcile regularly – ensure credit notes are matched to original invoices in your accounting system