In B2B commerce, the moment of delivery is a critical control point. When goods arrive at a business's receiving dock, someone needs to confirm that what was ordered actually arrived, in the right quantity, in acceptable condition, and on the expected date. That confirmation is the goods received note (GRN)—an internal document that protects the buyer from paying for goods not received, prevents inventory discrepancies, and creates the paper trail needed to resolve disputes with suppliers.
Our free goods received note template is designed for purchasing managers, receiving departments, and small businesses that need a professional, standardized format for documenting inbound receipts against purchase orders.
What Is a Goods Received Note?
A goods received note (GRN) is an internal document created by the receiving department of a buying organization to record the physical receipt of goods from a supplier. The GRN captures what was actually received, when it was received, who received it, and in what condition—creating a three-way match with the purchase order (what was ordered) and the seller's invoice (what is being billed).
The GRN is fundamentally a buyer's document. It protects the buyer's interests by creating an objective record of delivery that can be used to:
- Confirm receipt of goods, triggering the payment process
- Identify discrepancies between what was ordered and what was delivered
- Document damaged goods for insurance and claims purposes
- Update inventory records accurately
- Provide evidence in disputes with suppliers about delivery completeness or condition
Key Elements of a Goods Received Note
Header Information
The GRN header should include:
- GRN number (a unique, sequential identifier for the receiving organization's internal tracking)
- Date and time of receipt
- Purchase order number(s) being fulfilled
- Supplier name and delivery address (your receiving dock address)
- Carrier information (the shipping company and tracking/pro freight number)
- Supplier's invoice number (if already received)
Receiving Personnel
The name, employee ID, or signature of the receiving team member who inspected and accepted the delivery should be recorded. This establishes accountability for the receipt decision and creates a point of contact if questions arise later.
Line Item Verification
For each line item on the purchase order, the receiving team should record:
- Item description and SKU/PN as ordered
- Quantity ordered (from the PO)
- Quantity received (what was actually counted)
- Quantity accepted (what was received in acceptable condition)
- Quantity rejected (what was received damaged, defective, or non-conforming)
- Condition notes (any observations about the quality or condition of received goods)
Discrepancy Documentation
When the quantity received differs from the quantity ordered, or when received goods are damaged or non-conforming, the GRN must document the discrepancy clearly. This includes:
- The nature of the discrepancy (short shipment, over shipment, wrong item, damaged goods, quality issue)
- The quantity affected
- Whether the discrepancy has been reported to the supplier
- Any claim or return authorization number issued by the supplier
Disposition of Received Goods
The GRN should note where received goods are being stored or directed—particularly for organizations with multiple warehouses or locations. Items held for quality inspection should be noted separately from goods being moved directly to stock.
The Three-Way Match Process
The GRN is most powerful when used as part of the three-way match process in accounts payable:
Step 1 — Purchase Order: The buying organization issues a PO authorizing a supplier to deliver specific goods at specific prices and quantities.
Step 2 — Seller's Invoice: The supplier ships the goods and issues an invoice for payment.
Step 3 — Goods Received Note: The receiving department receives the goods, inspects them, and creates a GRN documenting what was actually received.
Match Check: Accounts payable compares the three documents. If quantities, prices, and descriptions agree across all three, payment is approved. If the GRN shows a discrepancy with the PO or invoice (e.g., fewer items received than invoiced, or damaged goods), the discrepancy must be resolved—typically by requesting a credit note from the supplier—before payment is approved.
Sample Goods Received Note Scenario
Background: "Summit Construction Materials," a commercial building supply company, receives a delivery from "Pacific Steel Supply" against PO #SC-2026-2201.
Delivery Contents:
- #4 Rebar, 20ft lengths × 500 units — ordered 500, received 480, 20 damaged
- Steel channel, 10ft lengths × 200 units — received 200, all acceptable
GRN #GRN-2026-0892 documents:
- Header: Received April 14, 2026, by J. Martinez (Receiver ID #447), carrier: FedEx Freight, PRO #4829301847
- Line 1: #4 Rebar — ordered 500, received 480, accepted 460, rejected 20 (visible surface corrosion on bends)
- Line 2: Steel channel — ordered 200, received 200, accepted 200, all acceptable
- Discrepancy: 40 units short on rebar, 20 units rejected due to damage
- Action: Damage claim #DC-2026-0447 submitted to Pacific Steel; credit note requested for 40 units + 20 damaged units
Summit Construction's accounts payable holds payment on Invoice #PSI-2026-8834 pending receipt of a credit note for $14,800 plus applicable taxes.
Related Templates
- Delivery Note Template — For suppliers documenting shipments
- Packing Slip — Seller-side packing documentation
- Delivery Slip — Driver-side proof of delivery
- Shipping Note — Carrier and logistics documentation
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Legal Requirements for a Goods Received Note
A goods received note (GRN) is the procurement-accounting document that formalizes receipt of purchased goods and triggers downstream accounts payable workflows. It is the second leg of the standard three-way match: purchase order, goods received note, and supplier invoice must all reconcile before payment is released. The GRN serves as primary evidence in any dispute about delivery quantity, item condition, or contractual compliance. Always check current state law and industry contract conventions, particularly for regulated procurement (government, healthcare, pharmaceutical).
Industry Use Cases
Corporate procurement operations across every industry rely on the GRN as the trigger for accounts payable processing. Public-sector procurement requires the GRN to be signed by an authorized receiving officer separate from the requestor (segregation of duties). Pharmaceutical and medical-device receiving requires additional GRN fields for lot number, expiration date, and chain-of-custody documentation. Construction-materials receiving uses the GRN to trigger progress-billing milestones and to document material-quality acceptance before pour or installation.
Digital vs Paper Goods Received Notes
ERP systems (SAP, Oracle, Microsoft Dynamics, NetSuite, Workday) generate GRNs automatically upon receiving-dock scan, with immediate updates to inventory, accounts payable, and supplier-performance dashboards. The digital GRN integrates with the PO and the supplier invoice for automated three-way match — discrepancies surface as payment-hold exceptions for human review. Paper GRNs persist at smaller operations and at remote sites without ERP connectivity, typically scanned and uploaded within 24 hours of receipt.
How to Handle Goods Received Note Disputes
The most frequent disputes are quality discrepancies — the goods match the quantity but fail the quality specification. Resolve by quarantining the affected stock, photographing the quality issue, sampling for laboratory analysis if applicable, and filing a formal non-conformance report against the supplier. The GRN should be marked "received pending quality review" rather than rejected outright, because outright rejection without due process can trigger contract penalties. Quantity disputes are resolved by re-counting under camera, matching to packing slip and bill of lading, and reviewing carrier handling scans for evidence of in-transit loss.