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Terms
of Sale: Examples
Terms of
sale can be separated into different categories: prepayment, cash, net,
and special. Regardless of the kind of terms used by a seller, they should
be clearly communicated in writing and agreed to by the buyer. Prepayment
Terms or Cash Terms also referred to as prepayment or closed terms, include
payment before the transaction, at the time of the transaction, or in
a short period after the transaction, usually no longer than 10-14 days.
Cash terms do not ordinarily offer any discount. The short credit period
allows the buyer sufficient time to examine and accept the merchandise.
When cash terms requiring payment before the merchandise is delivered
are offered, this is an indication that the seller does not wish to extend
credit to the buyer. The following terms are prepayment terms, requiring
payment before delivery:
- Cash
in Advance (CIA)-These terms require the buyer to make payment via
one of the cash methods (wire, bank check, etc.) before an order will
be shipped.
- Cash
before Delivery (CBD)-No delivery is required until the buyer has
made payment.
- Cash
on Delivery (COD)-These terms require payment to the transportation
company for the full invoice amount at the time of the delivery. There
is the risk that the buyer will not accept the shipment, which means
that the seller will have to bear the costs of freight charges to and
from the buyer's location, preparation and packaging costs, and possible
deterioration of the product.
- Cash
with Order (CWO)-These terms are offered when the seller requires
payment before shipment can occur. The seller requires that a check
be included with the order or that some form of cash payment be received
at the time the order is placed.
- Bill-to-Bill
terms-These are also called drop delivery or load-to-load terms
and require payment for the previous shipment when a new delivery is
made. These terms are often found in lines involving weekly deliveries.
Perishable foods sold to retail stores and gasoline sold to retail service
stations are representative of this type of credit term.
Ordinary
or Standard Terms
Most businesses
grant credit according to an industry-wide set of terms:
- Open
account terms, also called ordinary terms, or standard terms include
three elements: the net credit period, the cash discount and the cash
discount period.
- The
net credit period is the length of time allowed for payment of the
face amount of the invoice. When the net credit period is expressed
as a net term or net 30, payment must be made in full within 30 days
from the date of the invoice.
- Next
month terms specify payment in the month following shipment. An
example of a next month terms is: Net 10th prox. (proximo). This terms
means that payment of the full amount of the invoice is due on the tenth
day of the following month.
- End-of-Month
(EOM) terms are usually offered for a consolidated bill that represents
purchases and shipments of goods during the monthly period.
- Discount
terms offer an inducement for the purchaser to pay ahead of maturity.
A cash discount is offered off the invoice amount if the customer pays
within a specified period of time called the discount period. It is
usually expressed as a percentage but can also be stated as a dollar
amount. For example, terms of 1%, 10/net 30 allow the buyer to deduct
1% from the face amount if the invoice is paid within 10 days. The amount
of discount is calculated by successively applying the discounts to
the quoted price. For example, terms of 10% and 5% on a $100 invoice
would allow a 10% reduction of $100, then a 5% reduction on the remaining
$90, for a net due of $85.50.
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