When a member buys a gift voucher, or a countdown extension voucher, these can be logged on the accounting system in the Gift Vouchers section.
To start adding a gift voucher, click the ‘add new’ button

You can enter details of the gift voucher, along with which group this was for (optional).
When the gift voucher has been entered, the system will automatically add this to your total expenses and income, so you don’t need to add it when you order the voucher on the eshop.
You can also view a summary on the Gift Voucher Report.
Gift Voucher Journey
Gift Vouchers can appear as a complex process to manage for the purposes of your tax return. This is because in the frame of the business, under the cash basis system of accounting (as consultants use), it appears twice in both income and expenses.
Example: Claire takes a payment of £59.50 from a member for a 12 week gift voucher. This would be classed as income.
The next day, Claire orders a gift voucher which is priced at £59.50. This is classed as an expense.
The £59.50 money is now in ‘credit’ at Slimming World.
The next week, the gift voucher is provided to the member and they use it in group. This would be classed as income (and appears on your PFS Document).
Slimming World then pay the money to the consultant depending on their retained earnings, and is credited as a sundry. This is classed as income.
As such, from the example above, there would be a mix of transactions to log for the account:
- £59.50 income (payment from member)
- £59.50 expense (payment to Slimming World for the Gift Voucher)
- £XX.XX income (credited as a sundry from Slimming World)
Why do we need to log it in this way?
Your Slimming World Franchise is a business – and therefore when looking at your accounts, you would see two incomes and one expense for this item.
On your bank statement for example, the money received from the member is reported, and the money paid out is also shown. Although the money does not stay with you , the money goes through the business and must be logged.
The consultant then becomes the ‘owner’ of the gift voucher which is passed to the member who can redeem this as any group location – or the consultant could use it themselves. This is similar to the ‘ownership’ of group shop sales (books).
If you incur any charges with the initial payment (such as a charge for a cheque to be processed, or for use of a EFT Card Machine), you should log these separately as expenses as usual.