A return order, also known as a sales return, is a document used to record products sent back by a customer. Returns usually occur due to defective items, incorrect shipments, or order cancellations. Return orders play an essential role in inventory management and accounting, as they adjust stock levels and update financial records such as accounts receivable.
When a customer discovers defective items, incorrect shipments, or wishes to cancel their order, they often initiate or request a return by referencing the original sales order. Upon receipt, the business then checks the returned items against the original order and validates the reason for return. Inventory levels are consequently updated to reflect the returned goods, while financial records are adjusted for refunds or credits. The return order serves as an official record for auditing, accounting, and customer service purposes.
Return orders ensure that the returned products are properly tracked and restocked— that inventory levels are accurate. Moreover, it improves financial accuracy by triggering an adjustment to accounts receivable and reducing the risk of incorrect billing. Aside from providing a clear record for resolving disputes, processing refunds, or issuing replacements, it also serves as a document trail for regulatory or internal audit purposes.
A typical return order includes the following information:
Return orders records returned products, while credit notes confirm refund or credit to customers. A credit note is often issued after return order and has no direct impact to inventory— it simply confirms financial credit. On the other hand, return orders affect inventory and accounts receivable.
Modern sales order and ERP systems often link return orders to sales order, customer, accounting, and inventory to automatically update inventory quantities, adjust financial records, trigger workflows for refunds, replacement, or exchanges, and maintain a full audit trail for reporting and compliance.