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Invoice vs estimate — when each is created

Two related but separate documents. Both have line items, both have totals — but they sit at different points in the job.

An estimate is a quote

An invoice is a bill

  • Created when work is complete (or when you're ready to charge — for deposits, for instance).
  • Read-only once issued.
  • Deducts stock from inventory for any parts on the invoice.
  • Counts toward revenue, ARO and tax reports.

Estimate → Invoice

From a signed estimate, click Convert to invoice. All line items, prices, customer and vehicle info copy over. You can edit before issuing — useful if labour took an extra hour or you swapped a part.

Pro pattern: some shops always invoice the same as the signed estimate, making the customer's expectation match the bill exactly. Others adjust for what was actually done. Either is fine — pick one and stick to it.

Standalone invoices

You don't have to start from an estimate. For walk-in jobs you priced verbally, go straight to Invoices → Create invoice.

Invoice statuses

  • Draft — built but not issued. Editable.
  • Issued / Unpaid — sent to the customer; locked.
  • Partially paid — at least one payment received, balance outstanding.
  • Paid — settled in full.
  • Cancelled — voided. If parts had been issued from stock, manually adjust them back via Stock movements — cancellation does not auto-return inventory.

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