7 MIN READ 
Recording daily sales is only one part of F&B accounting Singapore restaurant GST work. Restaurants deal with dine-in bills, takeaway orders, delivery platforms, service charge, GST, tips, staff meals, wastage, inventory, and POS settlement reports. If these numbers are not separated properly, month-end accounts can look clean on the surface but still contain GST and profit errors.
The biggest risk is simple. Restaurants collect money fast, but not every dollar collected has the same accounting treatment. Food sales, service charge, GST, platform fees, card settlements, and staff tips need separate handling.
A restaurant can have hundreds of small transactions in one day. Some customers pay by card, some use delivery apps, and some pay cash. The POS system may show gross sales, while the bank account shows net settlement after card fees or platform charges.
This creates timing and classification issues. A S$10,000 sales day may not become S$10,000 in the bank that night. Some amounts may be GST collected for IRAS. Some may be service charge. Some may be delivery platform receivables. Some may later reverse because of refunds or cancelled orders.
That is why restaurant accounting should start with POS reconciliation, not only bank reconciliation.
Service charge GST Singapore restaurant treatment is one of the most important areas for GST-registered restaurants. IRAS guidance for hotels and F&B businesses explains that service charge, often 10%, is subject to GST. This is because it forms part of the total price for the goods and services supplied. GST should be calculated on the total price payable inclusive of service charge.
For example, if food and drinks cost S$100 and service charge is S$10, GST is charged on S$110. At the current 9% GST rate, GST is S$9.90, so the total bill becomes S$119.90. IRAS also confirms that the prevailing GST rate is 9%. GST-registered businesses must charge GST at 9% on taxable sales of goods and services in Singapore. This applies unless zero-rating or exemption rules apply.
GST-registered businesses usually need to show GST-inclusive prices to the public. F&B businesses that impose service charges get an administrative concession. They may display GST-exclusive prices, but they must show a prominent statement that prices are subject to GST and service charge.
This point matters for menus, QR ordering pages, online booking pages, takeaway counters, and delivery listings. If a restaurant does not impose a service charge, the concession does not apply. If it uses a nominal service charge only to avoid GST-inclusive display rules, then again concession does not apply. IRAS notes that failure to comply with price display requirements can result in a fine.
Restaurant POS accounting Singapore should connect sales categories, payment types, GST codes, and settlement reports. A POS report is not useful if it only shows total sales. It should help the accountant trace what was sold, how the customer paid, and what amount reached the bank.
| Area | What To Track | Why It Matters |
| Dine-In Sales | Food, drinks, service charge, and GST | Supports GST and margin review |
| Takeaway Sales | Food items and GST-inclusive pricing | Avoids menu price display errors |
| Delivery Sales | Gross sales, platform fees, refunds, and settlements | Prevents net payout being treated as revenue |
| Tips | Voluntary tips, staff allocation, and payroll records | Keeps tips separate from service charge |
| Inventory | Food stock, beverages, wastage, and staff meals | Improves food cost control |
| GST Accounts | Output tax, input tax, and GST payable | Supports GST filing |
| Cash And Cards | Cash drawer, card slips, and bank receipts | Helps detect missing settlements |
F&B inventory management Singapore SFRS work affects profit directly. Restaurants often lose margin through wastage, spoilage, staff meals, wrong portion control, supplier price changes, and unrecorded stock movement.
IAS 2 states that inventories are measured at the lower of cost and net realisable value.It also explains that inventory cost includes costs of purchase. It includes conversion costs and other costs needed to bring inventory to its present location and condition.
Tip reporting Singapore IRAS F&B needs careful separation. A service charge added by the restaurant is part of the bill and subject to GST. A voluntary tip given by a customer should not be mixed with service charge without review.
If tips are collected by the restaurant and later distributed to staff, the business should keep a clear record of tip collection and staff allocation. For employee tax purposes, employment-related gains and profits are generally taxable unless specifically exempted or covered by an administrative concession.
Restaurants should also decide their tip policy clearly. Are tips paid directly to staff? Are they pooled? Are they distributed through payroll? Are card tips included in staff payouts later? The answer affects record keeping and staff communication.
GST-registered restaurants can generally claim input tax only when the purchase meets input tax conditions and proper support is available. Supplier tax invoices, import permits, rental invoices, equipment invoices, and utilities bills should be kept properly.
Restaurants should be careful with entertainment expenses, staff benefits, private use, and mixed-use purchases. Not every GST amount on a bill is automatically claimable. GST-registered businesses must also keep proper business and accounting records for at least 5 years to support GST declarations.
These errors usually come through weak daily controls. A short daily close process can prevent a long month-end cleanup.
F&B accounting Singapore restaurant GST work becomes much easier when restaurants separate sales, service charge, GST, tips, delivery settlements, and inventory movement properly. A good accounting process gives owners a clearer view of tax, food cost, staff payouts, and real profit.
A stronger F&B finance setup works best when POS reports, GST records, inventory controls, and payroll treatment are reviewed together. At Arnifi, our expert team helps restaurants build that setup so filings stay clean, margins stay visible, and the business can grow with better control.
Yes. Service charge is subject to GST because it forms part of the total price for goods and services supplied by the restaurant. GST should be calculated on the price inclusive of service charge.
GST-registered F&B businesses that impose service charges may display GST-exclusive prices under an administrative concession. But they must show a clear statement that prices are subject to GST and service charge.
Restaurants should record tips separately from service charge. If tips are collected by the business and distributed to staff, the restaurant should keep clear collection and allocation records.
Restaurants should keep POS reports, tax invoices, GST account records, sales listings, purchase records, bank statements, delivery platform reports, and other supporting documents for at least 5 years.
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