Guide · HR & Payroll

Staff loans, advances and final settlement: the money your notebook keeps losing

Every salon lends money to staff. Very few can tell you, to the rupee, who owes what today — or what a resigning employee is actually owed. Both numbers should take one click.

Ask a salon owner how much their team collectively owes them in loans and advances, and you will usually get a pause, a guess, and a promise to check the notebook. That notebook is where money goes to disappear: the loan given in March, the two advances in May, the installment that was skipped because salary ran short — none of it reconciled, all of it negotiable at settlement time.

This guide covers the whole lifecycle — lending, recovering, and settling — and what it looks like when your payroll system and your books handle it as one system.

Advance vs loan: two different promises

An advance is small and short: money against this month's salary, recovered in full at the next payroll. A loan is bigger and longer: repaid in agreed monthly installments over months. The distinction matters because the recovery rules differ — an advance clears at the next payslip; a loan needs an installment schedule that survives months of payroll runs without anyone remembering it.

A loan is an asset, not an expense

The most common bookkeeping mistake with staff loans is recording them as an expense. Do that and two things break at once: your profit for the month looks artificially bad, and the repayment has no home — so recoveries either inflate later profit or quietly vanish.

The correct treatment is the one every accountant expects: the loan is a receivable — an asset. Cash goes down, "Staff Loans / Advances (Receivable)" goes up, and profit is untouched, because you have not spent anything; you have converted cash into a claim. In TressyPOS this happens automatically: give a loan from the drawer or any bank account and it books to a receivable child account you can see in the Chart of Accounts, the Trial Balance and the account's own ledger.

Recovery that runs itself

A loan agreement is only as good as its collection. TressyPOS shows the outstanding loan and monthly installment right on the payroll roster — Loan due: Rs 10,000 · inst. Rs 2,000/month — and deducts the installment on every payslip automatically. Two rules keep it fair:

Salaries paid in installments

Cash flow in a salon is lumpy, and real owners often pay salaries in parts. Most software forces a fiction: mark the whole salary paid, remember the difference privately. TressyPOS supports partial salary payments honestly — pay Rs 5,000 of a Rs 10,000 payslip today, the balance stays on the books as Salary Payable with a Partial badge, and each installment records its own date and source account. Overpay by mistake and the extra books itself as an advance, recovered at the next payroll.

Final settlement: the number nobody can argue with

When someone resigns, the settlement conversation is usually a negotiation about memory. It should be arithmetic:

In TressyPOS you click Deactivate / Resign, pick the actual resignation date — even a backdated one — and the settlement figure recalculates live to that exact day. Days after the resignation date do not count; paid off-days stop accruing; and if the loan exceeds the dues, the settlement honestly shows that the staff member owes the salon. After deactivation, the person disappears from future payroll months automatically while every historical record stays intact.

Why this has to live inside one system

A loans notebook, a payroll spreadsheet and an accounting file cannot reconcile each other. One system can: the loan books as a receivable, the roster displays it, payroll recovers it, the payslip explains it, and the settlement closes it — with the day-close and a daily self-audit guarding the numbers in between. That chain is the difference between lending money and losing it.

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Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a staff advance and a staff loan?

An advance is a small amount against the current month's salary, recovered in full at the next payroll. A loan is a larger amount repaid in agreed monthly installments. Both are receivables — money the salon is owed — not expenses.

Is a staff loan an expense for the salon?

No. The moment you book a loan as an expense, your profit looks worse than it is and the repayment becomes untraceable. A loan is an asset (a receivable) that shrinks as installments are recovered from salary.

How is a final settlement calculated when a staff member resigns?

Everything owed up to the resignation date: unpaid payslips, days worked in the current un-billed month, minus any advances and loan balance still recoverable. TressyPOS calculates this automatically when you pick the resignation date.

Can I pay a salary in installments?

Yes — with TressyPOS you can pay any amount of a generated payslip; the balance stays on the books as Salary Payable, each installment carries its own date and source account, and the payslip closes automatically when fully paid.

Lend it, track it, recover it — automatically

TressyPOS books loans as receivables, recovers installments at payroll and settles resignations to the day. Start a 30-day free trial.

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