Pos Software Source Code

Point Of Sale (POS) software is required to handle the transactions which process the funds. POS software also provides an e-store which manages the inventory and has many more features. Till now, many retailers are spending huge amount of money on premium point of sale softwares. But, there are many advanced yet freemium POS software for small businesses having extraordinary features that deal with Mega Stores, and so on. If you want to grow your business without spending much, choose one of the following free and open source POS software and see the difference.

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This is a complete point of sale and inventory system written in Visual Basic.NET. Features: - Categories - Suppliers - Customers - Employees - Products. Windows Point-Of-Sale Software Software. Free, secure and fast downloads from the largest Open Source applications and software directory - SourceForge.net.

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Isn’t that like the Sasquatch or the Loch Ness Monster? Things only children and crazy people believe? It’s NOT a myth. Free POS exists, though you’ll still have to buy the hardware, whether that’s is a full register/scanner/printer combo or just a desktop computer or tablet. Below, I’ve gathered a list of the elusive sasquatches of the software world.

In this collection, you’ll find a few open-source options, a few truly free versions (which is an anomaly not just in the POS world, but in the software world at large), and one freemium product. Most of the solutions are locally installed, except where specified, and they’re presented in alphabetical order. Chromis is a relative newcomer, the result of a split from the uniCenta project listed below.

Born in 2015, Chromis is a Windows-only system, running on Windows XP through 10. The open source POS supports customized layouts for receipts and screens, a built-in customer database, using kitchen monitors for order displays, and CSV-based product import, which can be a real time saver for businesses just starting out.

Free Source Code

The project’s is full of positive reviews from users, many that came over from uniCenta or OpenBravo (the precursor to the precursor). This is the first of many systems that you’ll find here with very active creators. John L., the founder of Chromis, is heavily involved in the day-to-day of the project. That means new features and bug fixes are pulled right from the users. Chromis also offers a that integrates with the POS, if you want to send orders back to a separate monitor.

EHopper is a POS solution that was created with intention of helping small business owners stick to their budget, without sacrificing quality in their software. EHopper also seeks to prevent small business owners from getting locked into systems or hardware that are a poor fit for the company. On the limitations side, the free version only integrates with one credit card processor (A1 Charge), support is limited, and you won’t be able to integrate with. You’re also limited to one register and you won’t be able to use the system’s employee clock features.

Moving up to the paid version will cost you $40 per register and will give you access to those missing features., giving it a 4/5 star rating, with over ten reviews. As a result, eHopper can easily run a small store end-to-end for free. Its features include contact management, some inventory management, handling tips and split payments, and employee management. EHopper runs on Windows, Android tablets, and iPads, giving stores a nice range of options. Floreant is a free and open source POS built for restaurants. It can run on Windows, Mac, or Linux, and it’s really, actually free.

The company makes money by helping businesses set up the system and by providing ongoing support. You can use tablets to run Floreant in your restaurant, taking the POS right out to your customers’ tables. Or, you can use the bar tabs feature and preauthorize cards, holding them until the customer closes the night out. On top of these basics, Floreant connects to kitchen printers, runs a great set of reports, gives managers a set of tools including splits and voids, and lets you easily manage menus and recipes. The clear limitation is its restaurant-focused nature.

Everything Floreant offers is great, unless you’re selling new tires and car maintenance. If you’re looking for a free restaurant POS, this could be a great place to start. Even though it’s an open source, it comes with a simple installer for folks who don’t want to get into the weeds. Imonggo has been on the scene since 2009.

The company launched a massive redesign in late 2016 and now claims users in over 1,100 cities around the world. Imonggo has also joined up with Mercury/Vantiv, which is the POS’s credit card processor of choice (though card integration only comes at the paid level). Imonggo’s free version is well-suited to one location, supporting a single user in a single store.

That store can manage 1,000 products and 1,000 transactions per month. It’s a fairly high limit, depending on the type of store you run. Your single location can use an iPad, Android tablet, PC, or Mac to run Imonggo—which is to say, it’s web-based. This is a real thing, as the free version doesn’t support offline mode.

If your internet connection is spotty, you might want to look at an installed option. For bigger businesses, Imonggo offer a $30 per month, per location plan. With it, you’ll get unlimited users, offline selling, and no limits on either products or transactions. Keyhut’s Cash Register software is the brainchild of the inimitable Dale Harris, who is the internet’s greatest curmudgeon. He is unapologetically himself and.

Why is cash Register is a completely free POS system? Dale says “One purpose of the program is to help small or medium business to compete with large chain stores. But mostly I am doing this to have fun.

It works with any cash register/printer/PC combo you might have (Though if you run a 64-bit system, ), and he’s considering expanding the coding to include tablets. For extremely small businesses, the software can be run off your home computer, provided you don’t mind receipts being printed on regular sheets of paper. This system, despite being free, can actually hold its own among paid POS systems aimed at small businesses. It can run multiple types of reports–including breaking down sales by employee. It has some basic employee management, CRM, and inventory tracking features. It supports multiple registers. Dale also offers better customer service than some paid versions I could name.

He responds very promptly to his email, runs an open forum, and is available via chat and phone from 8-10 p.m. Every weeknight to work out any and all problems. Cash Register has, and it’s exactly what you would expect. Glowing, raving about the value, and loving Dale’s sense of humor. I find his website charming and, from the screenshots, I find his interface to be identical to ones used in many grocery stores–so, not that bad. Which is all Dale was going for, he’d likely remind you.

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Loyverse is a totally free POS app intended for use on any or devices. Loyverse, as the name suggests, was built with the intention of making it easy to build customer loyalty through technology. As a result, Loyverse has a companion app for your customers to install, which you can use to easily create a killer loyalty program and send push notifications.

Loyverse has multistore management and a dashboard app for easy management. Loyverse has grown quickly and now counts over 240,000 users, according to research. It’s free nature is certainly a selling point, but Loyverse is packed with features too. You can manage discounts, work offline, do some inventory management, do a tiny bit of employee reporting, and, as mentioned, get some customer loyalty in your business. Speaking of loyalty, the way Loyverse works is by getting customer to install the Loyverse app, which generates a QR code they can use in your store.

Once they’re signed up with your store, you can give them discounts and send out promotional material, via the app. Loyverse has been a, racking up 150, five star average reviews. UniCenta is one of the biggest names in open source POS software, boasting a system that could rival any paid small business POS.

It has inventory management, reporting, CRM, and even employee management features (many paid products don’t even come with all of those). uniCenta is also formatted for any type of hardware—PC, Linux, Mac, or mobile. UniCenta’s setup is incredibly flexible, allowing you to host it locally or drop it in the cloud to manage multiple locations off the same system. The software is 100% free, but you can upgrade to a subscription service if you fall in love with it. Subscribers get earlier access to new features, extended support, and some exclusive add-ons. At the free, Community level, you’ll get all the core functionality and much of the extended functions found in the newest versions—you might just have to wait a tick to get the hottest, newest tech.

Are overwhelmingly positive—a lot of users tout the ease-of-use that this solution has achieved, especially considered it’s open source. Does mention that the reporting feature is clunky. For users who like uniCenta but are looking for a slightly different flavor, (listed above) is built off the uniCenta system. ProffittCenter is mainly a cash register—it takes money, runs discounts, etc. It does run reports and have some inventory management capabilities that relate directly to automatic ordering of products.

It also has an extremely easy-to-use user interface. Dave Proffitt, the man behind this operation, provides customer support whenever you need it. And, like Dale Harris, Dave told us he provides a really high level of service—he’s available via email, phone, and chat and is willing to rework code. ProffittCenter also boasts an active user forum for support.

ProffittCenter is a Windows-only solution, but it sports plenty of customizable reports, barcode and printer support, and inventory management. You can also setup automatic backups, which are deposited directly into Dropbox. Overall, ProffittCenter is actually a great solution for merchants who are new to POS software. It’s got a great user interface, and it has the basic functionality to allow a new user to learn how to operate and set up POS software.

Vend, another web-based system, is actually one of the biggest names in POS, so it’s nice to see it them offering a freemium version. The ir free option is for one register and user with 10 or fewer active products and up to 1,000 customers, with community support. Again, this is an option for an extremely small retailer.

Nonetheless, if you run a stand at a farmer’s market, or perhaps a mall kiosk, this could be a really good permanent option for you. You’ll get access to some user management, inventory management, customer profiles, and core reporting features.

Vend also integrates with, which is a great win for small businesses looking to make their accounting as easy as possible. As for limitations, 10 products is the big one.

If you have a focused set of products, this could be fine. Anyone hoping to branch out, though, will want to plan for a move to Vend’s paid solutions, which start at $69 per month. Vend is cloud-based, but continues running with limitations when offline. It’s a feature-rich, easy-to-use system (can you say?). Vend sports a, with over 80 reviews. ZeroPOS is an Android-based POS that is completely free for all basic POS functionality, and what it defines as basic will run nearly all small to midsize retailers. Its basic version can easily compete with other full POS systems.

With the free version of ZeroPOS, you get access for just three registers but plenty of features. You get a basic CRM, support, discounts, a great set of reports, inventory management, and QuickBooks integration. You will have to upgrade to get access to a Windows installation, employee time management, unlimited stores and registers, and localized currency options.

ZeroPOS’s paid plans start at $30 per POS, per month. Other free and open-source POS options? So that’s my round up of the top open source and free POS software solutions. Have you come across any more of these elusive systems? How did you like them? Let me know in the comments!

Comment by Ed Perfect on February 5, 2015 at 1:08 pm I have personally tried several of the EPOS software reviewed here (and several other (so-called) free examples) not to mention many professional and bespoke systems from many years working in the retail and hospitality industries, a friend of mine uses Keyhut in his shop and it has a pretty devout following, however for me ProffittCentre stands head and shoulders above the rest. A comprehensive selection of customisable reports are available, more than I’ve ever needed. I have three tills networked easily together, one of them on a tablet, the other two on some pretty ancient old windows machines.

The database is MySQL, a reliable and trusted open-source solution. I have credit accounts set up for my B2B customers. Although the software has a pretty advanced automated ordering system, I am unable to take advantage of as I buy the same product from many different suppliers and I order in quantity when the price is good as opposed to predicted sales figures, booking in however is a delight (well, in comparison to my previous experiences). The software is straightforward to use, allows new items to be added from the sales screen, a life saver when switching to a new system. And Dave has always been more than happy to help, although I usually find a solution on the fairly active forum. It has a shedload of other options many of which I have never needed but it’s always good to know they are there!

Comment by Cara Wood on October 1, 2015 at 8:39 am Warren – I’m so glad to hear I could help you out!!! It really makes my day. 🙂 I have one small favor to ask.

If you remember, I’d love it if you could come back to Capterra in a few months and leave a review of Unicenta on. Your review will help me update this article accurately, and it’ll help other shoppers like yourself decide if they want uniCenta. Good luck in your endeavors and don’t forget to keep up with my blog as I write a lot of posts on how to run a store. Comment by K. Njikam Abdel Ramadan on November 20, 2015 at 5:40 am Hey Cara! I’m so pleased and thankful with the top list of the POS information. It has captured my attention and I took some time to read about them.

Many businesse owners will be glad choosing from among this list likewise someone like me who knows of one which is new and powerful and will like to share it with you. This one has many features which can fit nearly most businesses. Please try it out and see it yourself. Comment by Nero Saimon on December 30, 2015 at 7:39 pm With my long experience I see only few good open source POS system. There are not many attempt to bid with commercial feature rich pos. My observation is A.

Most of the POS are child of abandoned Open bravo code. Open bravo made good start but they quit! Then in last few years, unicenta could do any improvement rather than fixing and adding bugs – As a old guy I used Tina POS once it was simply a cool and stable POS. If the developer spend some time it could be a amazing POS this day. I Tried Samba POS in few of the stores. They are windows based system and less messy than Unicenta and simiar pos. My clients liked it cool interface and organized database.

Alas It eventually stopped open source POS and now almost dead. What I see Floreant POS is excellent piece of code. It does not mess with complicated installer. Just a zip file and it works. Only sad part is they focused Restaurant & Cafe POS and it struggle with Retail system.

I am big fan of Open source. Expecting more POS initiatives from kids. Comment by Tony Glynn on March 5, 2016 at 6:50 pm Cara, Here is another one. It is called BPOS Includes full stock control, CRM, Debtors, Creditors.

All in a tiny 2MB download. No database servers, no complicated web frontends etc. Blisteringly fast, it can index a million sales records in 10 seconds.

Lookups are instantaneous. The help file is incomplete but I’m actively updating it. It contains enough info to get started.

Check out some of the main features such as “combi search” where users can find stock items 6 different ways from a single prompt. Comment by John lewis on April 10, 2016 at 3:31 pm Hi I was happy to see the mention of Chromis Pos only your page. Chromis was born with the development of a kitchen screen app, so the user does not have to use a printer. Following on from a difference of opions, I decided to stop all the work I had done over the last 3 years on Unicenta and created my own fork. When I look at some of the unicenta forks I can see my work in these, which I take as a compliment to the things i added.

Chromis has built a large number of followers since we started in September 2015, which is growing at a steady pace. My intention is to keep Chromis free and continue to develop the product with some new features being developed that are been sponsored by a group of users. We have created a utility that can take Unicenta database and convert to Chromis. Since Unicenta decided to start charging a service fee to get the latest version we are seeing more people move to Chromis.

There is very active support forum for the users, and we have actively fixed user issues free of charge. Comment by swed dabest on June 28, 2016 at 8:20 am Thanks for the interesting info on open source POS. We’re just sick and tired of our current POS, Retail Pro 8.6 Small Business Edition ‘cos it’s a very expensive colossus with feet of clay, much obsolete and not at all user friendly. Once we mailed a question they couldn’t answer but still charged us $130. Open source projects with active forums are perfect when one need to translate captions and text and customize standards. Greetings from Sweden. Comment by AK Syndicate on July 28, 2016 at 10:19 pm I run my small F&B bussiness in early Feb 2016 and found this review, thanks to the blogger and reviewer so I can decide which one is better for my needs.

Transformers le jeu. Formerly i do IT Job and as an ordinary techie guy i searching some free open sourced POS to be my system so i can modify and it by my self to fullfill my needs. At first I use UniCenta and run it for several months.

Afterward i found other more nice GUI and intuitive POS called SambaPOS 4, the last Free Version non Open Sourced of SambaPOS that customizable and it run very well until now. The criteria for the POS that fullfill my needs is, it must Restaurant/Cafe/F&B Oriented, touchscreen friendly, and have Customer Display capability for Dual Monitor system as well as Kitchen Order Display/Print besides the Inventory and simple Reports capability. For those who run F&B bussiness I can recommend you SambaPOS 4 or UniCenta. There are many similar POS that forked from Open Bravo or UniCenta such as WandaPOS and Chromis. Now I’m looking forward for Floreant POS and Lyverse review as friend of mine asking me to help him setup POS system based on Windows 8/Android based tablet devices. Comment by John Ray on August 15, 2016 at 9:59 pm Thank You for your article, and for your readers comments. I am an independent popcorn Shop, a Mom & Pop per se, shopping pos systems.

I really only need/ want a pos program I can run on a desktop, that features reports on sales per hour and items sold, maybe time clock. Touch screen would be preferred. Your evaluations are enlightening, but, I’m unsure how to know if I can attach a receipt printer and cash drawer to a desktop running one of these programs. Where to find them.

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We are still in a situation where we must be frugal (not cheap). I am also really frustrated with; the per month offers, and the “sales people” not mentioning that their credit card systems, and whole systems, are proprietary, unless you ask (“best thing since sliced bread”. Long story shorter. Your thoughts on the best basic system/ program for me? I have spent 35yrs managing restaurants and have worked with many pos systems over the years. I just need simple, basic, and, cost effective, to get upgraded from my glorified calculator. I have two sisters who went to Mary Washington.