What deductions are
Post-invoice charges retailers and distributors apply against payments — for damages, returns, MCB invalidations, scan-down errors, freight, and many other categories.
Margin defense · post-invoice deduction control
TradeDeductions.com educates brands on what trade deductions are, why they occur, and how to effectively manage, dispute, and minimize them to protect margins. It also highlights their direct relationship to trade spend and slotting fees — linking to TradeSpend.org and SlottingFees.com.
The fundamentals
Most emerging brands react to deductions one at a time. Brands that defend margins frame deductions as a system to manage end-to-end.
Post-invoice charges retailers and distributors apply against payments — for damages, returns, MCB invalidations, scan-down errors, freight, and many other categories.
Some deductions reflect real cost (damages, freight). Others reflect retailer policy. Many reflect process errors that can be prevented or disputed.
Deductions sit at the bottom of the trade-spend stack — they erode margin after slotting and promotion are already paid. Compounded, they decide profitability.
Where deductions originate
Six categories drive the majority of post-invoice deductions for most CPG brands. Knowing where they originate is the first step to defending against them.
Damaged-pallet claims, shortage-on-receipt deductions, and PO-pallet variance — often disputable with proof of compliant shipment.
Manufacturer-chargeback (MCB) invalidations when scan-data, redemption, or proof-of-performance documentation isn't accepted by the retailer.
Scan-down promotion deductions calculated incorrectly — wrong rate, wrong period, double-counted units.
Freight chargebacks, accessorial fees, and OS&D (over/short/damaged) deductions — often the largest dollar line per shipment.
Distributor and retailer returns deducted at non-contracted rates, or for SKUs outside the contracted return window.
Vendor-compliance fines for routing, labeling, ASN, and EDI errors — the easiest category to prevent and the slowest to dispute.
Trade-spend stack
Deductions only make sense in the context of the broader trade-spend stack. Reading deductions in isolation produces the wrong dispute strategy.
TradeDeductions.com is the deduction layer of the curriculum. SlottingFees.com covers upfront authorization cost; TradeSpend.org covers the recurring promotional layer.
Upfront cost to gain authorization, placement, planogram inclusion, or chain-wide rollout.
TPRs, scan-downs, ad features, end caps, and digital coupons — the recurring promotional layer.
Post-invoice deductions for damages, returns, MCB invalidations, freight, and chargebacks — what this site covers.
Total cost of being on shelf and being promoted on shelf, after gross sales — the only number that matters at scale.
Practical process
Reconcile every deduction monthly against the negotiated terms — no deduction defended is an automatic loss.
Categorize deductions by root cause and rank by dollar impact. Most brands recover 60% of recoverable deductions by working the top 5 categories.
Build the dispute package — POs, BOLs, ASN logs, scan-data extracts, contract terms — and submit through the retailer's documented process.
Translate dispute outcomes into upstream process fixes — labeling, EDI, routing, scan-down setup — to reduce next-cycle deduction volume.
Use deduction history to renegotiate compliance, return windows, and MCB terms during the next vendor agreement renewal.
Source provenance
This shell preserves the source summary as a visible review artifact until final copy is signed off. All structure, theme, and routing tokens flow from the CMS runtime snapshot.
TradeDeductions.com educates brands on what trade deductions are, why they occur, and how to effectively manage, dispute, and minimize them to protect margins. It also highlights their direct relationship to trade spend and slotting fees—linking to TradeSpend.org and SlottingFees.com for a complete view of retail financial performance.
Curriculum links
Talk to the team
Send your last 12 months of deduction-summary data, target retailers, and current dispute process. The curriculum team returns a categorized audit and a recovery-and-prevention plan template.
Email the curriculum team →