Cash Rounding

Cash Rounding

People have been asking for the ability to round up hundreds of times, and Square indicates they can't do it, but in Canada, they got rid of the Penny years ago, and Square has a Cash Rounding feature already built into doing this.

 

It makes no sense that you can't add a feature to the US version allowing a business to round up or down cash sales automatically. Ideally, you could have user-selectable options for rounding - up only or up or down - plus amount to round to 0.05 or 0.10 or 0.25 or $1 rounding. Then, please create an account where this money could be tracked so users could apply it to a charity or an employee fund.

 

At the very least, let customers in the US turn on the Cash Rounding feature you've already built for Canada.

 

See this recent article on the Penny - if Square were to make a big announcement about getting rid of the penny, it might move the issue forward. Having my staff have to deal with pennies is a waste of time - please help us get rid of them.

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/01/magazine/worthless-pennies-united-states-economy.html?campaign_id...

126 Replies

How does Australia do it now?  They haven’t had the penny since 1992 and I’m sure Square is in use there. 

Can we migrate to their version?

Would be great to have this feature built in, especially with the Penny production end.
Any other method mentioned above fails when items sold in multiple quantity. Always the odd cents once tax is added
I've been using "Inclusive Tax" pricing to keep item sell price to nearest quarter, but that doesn't work for weighted items

Rounding will be very useful. If possible give us an option to round to nearest Nickel, Dime or Quarter

Would love to see this.

I am also adding to the forum, hoping to see an update SOON that allows rounding here in the US.  

I also just chatted Square. They said: no I'm sorry unfortunately we don't have a feature that can do that at the moment what I can do is leave this chat as feedback so in feature updates we can add a feature that can do that.

 

and then said: I understand is just that is not something a lot of merchants have requested so the development team hasn't add a feature for that yet I'm sorry.

 

So I'm not expecting much help here. 

Original Poster here:  

FYI:  I spoke with a representative from our owner company (>$100M in yearly sales) 2 weeks ago.  

SquareUp is our designated POS for retail stores, and has been for several years.  

He is going to add this to his list of thngs to negotiate with Square about, and to push for changes.

They have been successful in getting SquareUp/Block to do things that they didn't want to do.

I believe Square is only interested right now in additional "AI" type upgrades that they can charge extra $$ for

They are not interested in existing problems that won't make them any additional money--that's probably the barrier we are up against.  The last penny was made last week, and even my bank, that has been awesome, can't get any more pennies at all.  

The state laws about rounding don't hold any water if there are just no pennies available to give as change.

 

 

Square Champion

@DocPopcorn I wish it was that simple, the real fly in the ointment is that some states have laws AGAINST penny rounding.  You can't round down if it would mean charging an EBT customer more, by law they have to be charged the same.  Some states if you round down you are making it cheaper for cash customers and charging credit customers more, so that is a surcharge.  The opposite is to round everything up, now the states like new york will get you for discriminating against cash paying customers by charging credit card customers less.

 

Square is in the no win situation, because they are the merchant processor of record.  The "Common Cents" act that is pending is the fastest way to get this fixed.

Until square gets their stuff together and comes up with a rounding option, we have decided we will try this once we run out of pennies:

We will create buttons on the terminal that will be "discount buttons" with either $0.01, $0.02, $0.03, or $0.04 amounts for the discount.  So, When the total comes up to $12.52, we will just select the "$0.02" discount button.  Hopefully this will work how we want it to and will bring the total down to $12.50.  Also, since its a programmed discount, we will be able to track how many times its used.  

Conversely, if you don't want to take the hit as the company, you can just create buttons for charging customers the extra cents, and just make sure its not tied to sales tax.

We haven't had to implement this yet, so we are hoping it will work, But in theory, i think it will.

Our issue right now is that our bank no longer will take pennies in our deposits. What we have decided to do (until a point where we cannot get new pennies) is to take care of this rounding on a daily basis with our deposit. I round our deposit either up or down. I don't change the drawer close but rather just short or over the drawer by up to $.02 on any given day. While not ideal, it doesn't affect our customers right now and we are not seeing any shortage of pennies so this could go on for a while.

One thing we were concerned about is a customer having issues with their bank taking pennies and them bringing in pennies to pay with. We have put up a sign that we limit the numbers of pennies to $.05 on any transaction. Of course, this is a "soft" restriction, and we would not turn anyone down, within reason.

 

Maybe the government (and Square) will get this ironed out before we are forced to adjust our tickets on individual transactions.

Curious if there's an update on a new feature for this? We need an automatic solution. Rounding down would cost us noticeable revenue, and we want the option to choose whether to pass that cost to customers (round up or round down). Adjusting all our prices to end in $0.xx something to bring bill total to a rounded $0.05 isn’t realistic, we have too many modifiers and specific price points, and our 8.875% tax rate makes menu price changes to bring bill totals to an even $0.05 is unmanageable.