Creating draft orders
When you need to create an order on behalf of a customer, you can create a draft order in your Shopify admin. You add the customer details and products, and then send an invoice, collect payment, or set payment terms.
When the order is paid for or when you set payment terms, the draft order converts to an order and is listed on your Orders page.
You can use draft orders to sell directly to consumers or to sell to other businesses. If you regularly sell to other businesses, then review all of Shopify's business to business (B2B) features.
Draft orders are useful when you need to do the following tasks:
- Create an order so you can accept payment for orders later on that are placed over the phone, in person, or by email.
- Send invoices to customers to pay with a secure checkout link.
- Use custom items to represent additional costs or products that aren't displayed in your inventory.
- Re-create orders manually from any of your active sales channels.
- Sell products at discount or wholesale rates.
If you use Shopify Markets, then the local currency, pricing, duties, and taxes are determined by the market that's associated with the order. When more than one market is activated, the shipping address of the customer determines the market for the order. You can change the market on a draft order.
On this page
Create a draft order
Create a draft order on behalf of your customer and then send them an invoice for the order. By default, the invoice contains a link to a checkout, where your customer can pay for their order.
Draft orders can contain the following information:
Steps:
Add products
Reserve items
When you Reserve items in a draft order, those inventory units are put in the Unavailable inventory state and can't be purchased by other customers. The items that you reserve are dedicated to that particular draft order. If you don't reserve items, then the quantities stay in the Available inventory state and can be purchased by other customers. You can learn more about inventory states.
To reserve an item, inventory tracking must be activated for that product.
Steps:
- After adding your products to a draft order, click Reserve items.
- Select the date and time when the reserve will expire.
- Click Done.
Add discounts
You can apply discounts to the draft order in the following ways:
- Add an existing discount code to the order, along with eligible line items.
- Add all eligible automatic discounts.
- Add a custom amount off discount to the order.
- Add a custom amount off discount to individual line items.
Consider the following behaviors when applying a discount code or adding a custom discount to a draft order:
- Both custom order discounts and line item discounts are applied to the total price of the order. Be careful not to duplicate the discount.
- Eligible discount combinations can be added to your draft order in addition to custom order and line item discounts.
- You can choose to allow customers to apply discount codes during checkout when sending the invoice or sharing the checkout link. Be aware that draft orders risk potentially being discounted more than you anticipate when both you and the customer apply discount codes to the order.
- If an order is in a different currency than your store currency and you want to discount the full amount of a line item or an order, then enter the discount as a percentage instead of a specific amount. For example, you want to discount the full amount of an order where the total is $50 USD. Enter a discount of 100%, rather than a discount of $50 USD. Using the percentage discount avoids charging your customer a foreign exchange fee that can occur because rounding rules are applied to product prices, but not to discounts.
Limitations
Discount codes and automatic discounts for draft orders have the following limitations:
- Discount codes and automatic discounts aren't available on Shopify POS and can only be added in your Shopify admin on a desktop or mobile browser.
- A total of 5 discount codes can be applied to a single order.
- By default, discount codes can't be applied at checkout for orders created as draft order invoices or links. However, you can choose to activate the option for customers to apply discounts themselves during checkout. This option applies only to individual draft orders, so you must activate that option every time you want to allow your customer to be able to add discount codes during checkout.
- Shipping discount codes aren't supported. You can add a custom shipping rate to provide a discounted shipping rate to your customers instead of a regular rate.
- Buy X get Y discount codes aren't supported.
Apply a discount code
- Create an order or open an existing draft order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- In the Payment section, click Add discount.
- In Discount codes, type the discount code.
- Click Apply.
Apply all eligible automatic discounts
- Create an order or open an existing draft order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- In the Payment section, click Add discount.
- Check Apply all eligible automatic discounts.
- Click Apply.
Remove deactivated, ineligible, or deleted discounts
If a discount code or automatic discount added to an open draft order becomes invalid or ineligible before the order is complete, then the deactivated discount will prevent you and your customer from completing the order. You'll need to remove the ineligible discount code from the open draft order before you or your customer can complete the order.
Steps:
- Open the order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- In the Payment section, click Edit discount.
- Remove the ineligible discounts in one of the following ways:
- To remove discount codes, click the trash icon next to any discount code you want to remove.
- To remove automatic discounts, uncheck Apply all eligible automatic discounts.
- Click Save changes.
Apply a custom order discount
Steps:
Apply a custom line item discount
Add shipping
If the current order requires shipping, then you can choose a preset shipping rate, create a custom rate, or choose local delivery or local pickup.
Steps:
Add a tag
You can organize your orders beyond whether they're captured, paid, and fulfilled by adding tags. You can filter orders by tag, and then save the order view for that tag so that you can quickly access those orders in the future.
Steps:
Add or remove taxes
By default, draft orders include taxes based on your store's tax settings and the customer's shipping address. If you don't have a shipping address on file, then taxes are based on the customer's billing address instead.
Steps:
Add or remove a customer
Adding a customer is necessary if you want to use a location-based shipping rate for the current order.
Add a customer to a draft order
Steps:
Change a customer's contact information
Steps:
Remove a customer from a draft order
This won't remove the customer from the customer list in your Shopify admin.
Set payment terms for payments due later
Payment terms let you set the date that payment is due on an order. You can set payment terms on draft orders, or you can add them to existing orders that have a Payment pending status.
You can choose from the following options when setting the payment terms:
- Due on receipt: Use this option to set the payment as due on the date that you send the invoice to your customer.
- Net term: Use this option to set the payment as due within the specified number of days from the issue date. For example, you can choose Within 30 days, and the payment due date is set to 30 days after the issue date. By default, the issue date is set to the current date, but you can change the issue date after you select a net term option.
- Fixed term: Use this option to set the payment as due on a specific date.
If an order isn't paid by the due date, then the order status becomes Overdue.
After you set the payment terms, you can send an invoice or accept payment for the order.
Steps:
- Create an order or open an existing draft order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- In the Payment section, select Payment due later.
- Select one of the following Payment terms:
- To set the payment due on the day that you send the invoice, select Due on receipt.
- To set the payment due within a time duration of an issue date, select one of the Within days options, and then enter the Issue date.
- To set the payment due on a specific day, select Fixed date, and then enter the Due date.
- Click Create order.
Share checkout link with customers
If you create a draft order for a customer, then you can share a link to the checkout page for the order so that the customer can enter billing information, select a shipping method or local pickup, and submit payment. After the customer completes the checkout process using the link, the draft order becomes an order in the Orders page and is automatically marked as Paid.
There are two ways to share checkout links with your customers:
- Send an invoice to your customer, which contains a link to the checkout page.
- Share a checkout link directly with your customer in a social media app or direct message.
Send invoice
You can send an invoice to your customer with a link to the checkout page. Your customer can use the link in the email to enter billing information, select a shipping method or local pickup, and submit payment.
If you use Shopify Markets to sell internationally, then the currency on the invoice is determined by the market that's associated with the customer's shipping address. You can change the currency by changing the market.
You can also send invoices for orders with a Payment pending status. In one situation, you can't send an invoice when you set payment terms: if the draft order is in a local currency other than your store currency, then you can only collect payment by credit card or by marking the order as paid.
Steps:
Share direct checkout link
You can create a draft order and then share a link to the checkout page with your customer. This option is helpful for responding to customer requests initiated on social media apps or direct messaging.
Steps:
Accept payment
If you have your customer's billing information, then you can accept payment for draft orders by marking an order as paid if you have already received payment, or by accepting payment by credit card. When you accept payment for a draft order, it becomes an order on the Orders page.
You aren't charged third-party transaction fees for orders that are processed through Shopify Payments. You pay only the credit card processing fees when processing credit card purchases manually in your Shopify admin.
If you're using a supported direct credit card payment provider instead, then you pay the same third-party transaction fees when processing credit card purchases that you pay for online orders.
If you mark the order as paid and select a manual payment method, such as cash on delivery or bank deposit, then you don't incur third-party transaction fees for that order.
Mark payment as paid
If you've already received payment for the current order, or if you're importing a past order from another platform into your Shopify admin, then you can mark the order as paid. The received amount isn't captured again by your payment provider, and an order confirmation email is sent to the customer.
If you use Shopify Markets, then the value for Amount received is the value in the customer’s local currency converted to your store’s currency. The conversion is based on the live currency rate which fluctuates. For reporting purposes, if the amount you received is different than the amount displayed, then update it.
Steps:
- Open the order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- Click Collect payment.
- Click Mark as paid.
- Optional: If the Amount received value is different that the amount that you received, then update the value.
- Click Create order.
You can access the order that you created on your Orders page.
Accept payment by credit card
If you have the billing information of your customer, or if your customer is available to enter it directly, then you can accept payment for the order by credit card. This payment method is only available with Shopify Payments.
Steps:
- Create an order or open an existing draft order from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin.
- Click Collect payment.
- Click Enter credit card.
- Enter the customer's billing and credit card information.
- Click Charge to confirm your payment settings and create an order from your draft order.
Local currency on draft orders
If you use Shopify Markets to sell internationally, then the local currency, pricing, taxes, and duties are determined by the market that's associated with the order.
The market that's associated with the order is determined by the shipping address of the customer. Adding a customer to the order updates the pricing and displays your customer's local currency.
On draft orders that display a local currency other than store currency, the foreign exchange rate is calculated when you create the draft order. This rate is fixed and used on the invoice regardless of whether the exchange rate changes. However, if you save the order as a draft and edit it afterwards, then pricing on the whole order is updated with the foreign exchange rate that's current at the time of the edit.
If you want to use different pricing and currency for a draft order, then change the pricing and review the following impacts of changing the pricing on an order:
- Taxes are included or excluded from item prices. For example, orders with the United States market exclude taxes from prices, but orders with the Germany market include taxes in prices.
- Tax rates vary by market. At checkout, if a customer changes the shipping address to an address that's outside the market, then the correct tax rate for the customer’s shipping address is charged, but the market on the order, with its tax included or excluded setting, is unchanged.
- If you use a third-party service to determine the foreign exchange rate for a market, then pricing on an order is determined by the service’s exchange rate. However, the rate that Shopify Payments uses to calculate your payout is based on the market that's selected in Shopify. Therefore, the amount charged on the order can differ from the amount you receive in payment. For more information, refer to currency conversions and exchange rates.
- Manufacturer Suggested Retail Price (MSRP): If you are obliged to sell a product at the MSRP in a customer’s market, then you could be in breach of contract if you switch markets and use an alternative market price.
Change the market for an order
If you use Shopify Markets and you want to change the pricing and currency for your order, then you need to change the pricing. The Market section for your order is displayed only when a market other than your primary market is activated. If you want to change to particular market pricing, then you need to activate that market and local currency for the market.
Before you change the pricing, make sure to review the impact of changing the pricing.
Steps
- From your Shopify Admin, go to Orders > Drafts.
- Click a draft order that you want to edit.
- In the Market section, click the pencil icon.
- Select a market to apply its pricing to your draft order.
- Click Change pricing.
- Click Save.
Order pricing is displayed in the customer's local currency except when you make the following custom changes to the order:
- If you add a custom line item or order discount, then the Discount value displays in store currency.
- If you add a custom shipping price, then the Price displays in store currency.
- If you add a custom item, then the Price displays in store currency.
After you make these custom changes, they're displayed on the order in the customer's local currency.
Duplicate an existing order
When you create a draft order, you can save time by duplicating an existing order or an existing draft order. The following scenarios are examples of where duplicating an existing order might be useful:
- You often manually create orders for returning customers.
- You want to change or edit an existing order.
When you duplicate an existing order or a draft order, a new draft order is created with duplicates of the following information:
- products - The duplicate line item contains the latest information for that product. If a product has been removed, then it won't be included in the duplicate draft order.
- custom items
- customer information - If the customer has been deleted, then a customer is created based on the email, billing, and shipping addresses.
- email, billing, and shipping addresses
- notes, note attributes, and tags
- market
Discounts and shipping rates aren't duplicated in the draft order.
Steps:
- Open the order (or the draft order) from the Orders page in your Shopify admin.
- In the order (or draft order) details page, click Duplicate. A draft order is created with the same line items and customer information as the original order.
- Do one of the following actions:
- send an invoice
- accept payment
- save it as a draft
If you save your order as a draft, then you can update it later from the Drafts page in your Shopify admin. When you accept payment for your draft order, an order is created for it on the Orders page.