Often referred to as the Payment Remittance Advice, the Order Remittance Advice or simply The Remittance Advice, the EDI 820 informs the supplier that the retailer has received an invoice, otherwise known as the EDI 810.
Good question. An EDI 820 will have the following information:
When it comes to the EDI 820, suppliers are mainly looking for one thing: that the payment amount matches what was invoiced. If those amounts don’t match, the supplier expects the EDI 820 to explain why.
The EDI 820 helps supplier accounting departments manage retailer account reconciliation. And the electronic transfer of funds is authorized, the EDI 820 can help suppliers get paid faster, improving cash flow.
When the EDI 810 and EDI 820 process is automated between supplier and retailer, both organizations benefit from a more streamlined, more accurate process, which in turn, strengthens the business relationship.
There are two formats for the EDI 820: raw and readable. The raw version contains lines of what looks to be meaningless code. That is until an ERP system translates it into a “readable by humans” format, ready for reconciliation.
First, they’ll know money is on the way. From there, their EDI solution will crank back to the retailer an EDI 997, otherwise known as a Functional Acknowledgement. This document tells the retailer that an EDI document has been received.
Unfortunately, the answer is no. A retailer that doesn’t send an EDI 820 likely does not do so simply because that’s the way they do things. If you work with multiple retailers, this can create headaches. Is this retailer supposed to send me an 820? That’s where an EDI platform powered by people who know different (and often changing) requirements across the retailer landscape can be a huge help. And yes, we’re talking about ourselves. All self-flattery aside, keeping a finger on the pulse of the industry is a top priority here at eZCom. It’s how we are able to constantly improve our EDI platform, Lingo. And it’s also how we keep our customer support as strong as it is.