Cashier SOP Template: 6 Scenarios to Cover
A cashier SOP doesn't need to be long. One page covering 6 critical scenarios is enough.
Why SOPs Aren't Bureaucracy
"SOP" sounds corporate — like something for big companies, not a coffee shop. But a cashier SOP is really just a short checklist that answers: "When X happens, what should the cashier do?" Without this, every cashier interprets things differently, and the result is inconsistency.
A good SOP is 1 page per scenario, not a thick manual. Here are the 6 most important scenarios to cover.
Scenario 1: Opening a Shift
What the cashier should do when starting their shift:
- Log in with personal cashier PIN
- Count physical cash in the drawer by denomination
- Enter accurate opening balance into POS (don't estimate)
- Open shift in POS
- Check printer: enough paper? Test print 1 receipt
- Check menu: any products that need to be disabled due to out-of-stock?
- Read any notes from the previous shift
Time: ~5 minutes. This prevents 30+ minutes of chaos at shift closing.
Scenario 2: Rush Hour
Special procedures when queues start building:
- Focus on speed: minimize non-essential conversation, prioritize order entry
- Customer not ready to order? Hold the order, move to the next customer
- Product runs out? Disable it in the POS immediately — don't wait
- Don't try to resolve complex issues during rush — note them and handle after
- Communicate with kitchen: stock updates, time estimates, batch orders
Scenario 3: Processing Payments
Procedure per payment method:
Cash:
- Confirm the total to the customer before accepting money
- Count received money in front of the customer
- Enter the paid amount in the POS, let the POS calculate change
- Count change in front of the customer before handing it over
- Store cash in the drawer organized by denomination
QR Payments:
- Display QR code to customer
- Wait for payment confirmation in POS or notification from provider
- Don't close the transaction without confirmation — "I already paid" without proof is not confirmation
Scenario 4: Cancellations and Voids
This is the scenario that most often causes new cashiers to panic:
- Customer cancels before payment: Remove items from the order. If order was already sent to kitchen, coordinate with kitchen first.
- Customer cancels after payment: This requires a void. Explain that manager approval is needed (if override is required).
- Cashier entered wrong item: Void the incorrect item, re-enter the correct one. Record the reason for the void.
Principle: every void must have a recorded reason. A "void" without explanation is a red flag during review.
Scenario 5: Closing a Shift
- Announce that the shift is closed for new transactions
- Complete all pending transactions
- Count physical cash by denomination
- Compare to expected balance from POS
- Investigate discrepancies if above threshold
- Enter actual cash into POS, close shift
- Print/save Z-Report
- Deposit excess cash, leave standard balance for the next shift
- Write notes for the next shift if anything needs to be known
Scenario 6: Emergency Situations
Procedures for abnormal situations:
Internet outage:
- Switch to backup internet (phone hotspot) if available
- If no backup: record transactions on paper
- Don't panic — inform customers the system is temporarily down but you can still serve them
- Enter manual transactions into POS once internet is restored
Printer failure:
- Restart printer. If that doesn't work, check connection (cable/Bluetooth)
- If still not working: skip receipt printing, continue operations. Receipts can be reprinted later.
Angry customer/complaint:
- Stay calm and polite
- Listen without being defensive
- If beyond cashier authority: "I need manager approval for this" — use the override mechanism
- Don't make big decisions (refunds, large discounts) without approval
How to Implement These SOPs
- Print each scenario on 1 page, laminate, post near the cashier station
- Review with every new cashier on their first training day
- Update SOPs when new scenarios emerge
- Review every 3 months — an outdated SOP is more dangerous than no SOP
The Bottom Line
Good cashier SOPs are short, clear, and actionable. These 6 scenarios cover 90%+ of situations a cashier will face daily. The rest can be added as you discover new scenarios. What matters: SOPs are living documents — keep updating them based on real experience.
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