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Cash Count Sheet Template

Count every bill and coin, verify the total, and know instantly if the cash box balance is right — or where the gap is.

A cash count sheet template helps you count bills and coins by denomination, calculate the total, and compare it to the expected balance at the end of each shift.

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What Is a Cash Count Sheet

A cash count sheet is a structured form for counting physical cash by denomination. You list each bill and coin type, count the quantity of each, multiply to get a subtotal, and add everything up. The result is compared to your expected balance — the one your records say should be there.

If the two numbers match, you're done. If they don't, you have a discrepancy — and the count sheet is where the investigation starts.

How to Count Cash by Denomination

Bills

Count each denomination separately: $100, $50, $20, $10, $5, $1. Multiply the quantity by the face value. A stack of 4 × $20 = $80. Record each denomination on its own line.

Coins

Same process for coins: quarters ($0.25), dimes ($0.10), nickels ($0.05), pennies ($0.01). Count rolls separately if you have them. Loose coins get counted individually.

Total

Add all denomination subtotals together. This is your actual cash on hand. Compare it to the expected balance from your daily cash report or transaction log.

SpendNote transaction dashboard showing running balance — compare to your physical cash count
The system tracks the expected balance. You count the actual cash. They should match.

Cash Count vs Cash Reconciliation

The cash count sheet answers: "How much physical cash is here right now?"

Cash reconciliation answers: "Does the physical cash match what the records say?"

The count sheet is step one of reconciliation. You count the cash, then compare it to the expected balance. If they match, reconciliation is done. If they don't, you investigate using the transaction log, receipts, and reconciliation procedure.

Skip the Paper Count Sheet

SpendNote calculates the expected balance automatically. Count the cash, compare to the app, and you're done in seconds.

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When to Use a Cash Count Sheet

SpendNote filtered transaction report — verify cash count against transaction history
Filter transactions by date range to match against your physical count.

From Paper Sheet to Automatic Balance

A paper cash count sheet works. But if you're already logging transactions in SpendNote, the expected balance calculates itself. Your count sheet becomes a one-step process: count the cash, compare to the screen. Done.

SpendNote branded PDF report — export transaction summary to compare with cash count
Export a branded PDF summary for your records or to attach to the count sheet.

Important: SpendNote is for internal cash tracking and receipt generation. Cash count sheets and balance comparisons are internal controls — not official accounting records or audit documents. Use them alongside your formal accounting system.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a cash count sheet?

A cash count sheet is a form used to count physical cash by denomination — how many $100 bills, $50 bills, $20 bills, etc., plus coins. You multiply each denomination by the quantity, sum the totals, and compare the result to your expected balance.

How often should you count the cash box?

Best practice is to count at the start and end of every shift, or at minimum once daily at close. Some businesses also count when changing custodians or after large cash events. The more frequently you count, the faster you catch discrepancies.

What do you do if the cash count doesn't match?

Document the difference on the count sheet. Then investigate: check today's transactions for missing entries, look for unrecorded disbursements, and verify no change-making errors. If you track transactions digitally, you can compare the count to the system balance and trace the gap.

Can SpendNote replace a cash count sheet?

SpendNote tracks every transaction and calculates the expected balance automatically. You still physically count the cash, but instead of filling out a paper denomination sheet, you compare your count to the live balance in SpendNote. If they match, you're done. If not, the transaction log helps you find the discrepancy.

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