Stripe-backed invoicing for galleries: setup, deposits, and reconciliation
Payments fail when sales and finance diverge on what "paid" means. An operational guide to Stripe setup, deposits and instalments, and reconciliation that keeps invoices tied to inventory.
Payments fail when sales and finance diverge on what "paid" means. The fix is to configure Stripe deliberately, tie every invoice to inventory context, and reconcile against the same fields your accountants already trust. This post walks the operational guide we see galleries adopt when their first really meaningful private sale is on the calendar.
Foundations before the first invoice
Confirm legal entity details match gallery contracts. Buyers notice mismatches faster than internal staff and tend to flag them at exactly the wrong moment.
Map bank settlement timing expectations. Stripe payouts differ from legacy merchant processors that staff memorised over years; aligning expectations early prevents weeks of "where is the money" anxiety.
Define deposit versus balance schedules per market segment. Institutional procurement rarely tolerates ambiguous milestones, and private collectors deserve a schedule that matches their own bookkeeping rhythm.
Linking invoices to artworks
Every invoice line should resolve to catalogue objects where applicable. Opaque bundles frustrate diligence and resale documentation, and the staff member who created the bundle is rarely the one defending it later.
Sales tax or VAT posture depends on jurisdiction. Finance must own the rules; CRM cannot guess based on shipping country alone.
Credit memos and refunds belong tied to originating invoices, so the audit trail survives staff churn intact.
Deposits and instalments
Collect schedules in writing before sending payment links. Oral agreements do not survive controller review, and "we always do it this way" is not a defence anyone enjoys mounting.
Automate reminders with human escalation paths. Bots-only follow-ups insult high-touch collectors; the right escalation is usually a sentence from a partner, not a sterner email template.
Pause fulfilment triggers until cleared funds align with policy. Shipping early against uncleared wires has burned galleries during volatile FX windows historically, and the pattern keeps repeating.
Reconciliation cadence
Match payouts to invoice batches weekly. Waiting for quarter-end guarantees painful archaeology, and the people who have to do it are the ones you most want to keep.
Investigate pennies immediately. Rounding errors compound across currencies when ignored, and a clean ledger today saves hours of explanation later.
Coordinate with viewing rooms so proposed prices match invoicing states. Clients compare PDFs mentally, and a gap between what they saw and what they receive reads as either sloppiness or bait-and-switch — neither one is recoverable cheaply.
Governance
Limit Stripe dashboard access like wire credentials. Fewer operators means stronger change logs and easier post-mortems when something does go wrong.
Review dispute playbooks annually. Chargebacks on high-value art require registrar evidence packets prepared in advance, not assembled in a panic during the response window.
Document who can issue credits. Unfettered refunds erode both margin and the long arc of trust around an artwork's transaction history.
The reconciled state
The goal is undramatic: every invoice ties to an artwork, every payout ties to a batch of invoices, and every conversation with finance starts from agreed numbers. The platform is doing its job when nobody has to phrase a question with "we think".