Beyond Piece Counting: Why Mixed Value Cash Counting saves Australian Businesses Time
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We all know the piece counter. If you have 100 notes, it counts '100'. But for Australian business owners running registers full of mixed denominations ($5s, $10s, $20s, $50s, $100s), that standard piece counter often creates a secondary job: manually separating every single denomination before the count. That isn't efficient.

Value vs. Piece Counting Value counting solves this pain point completely. Unlike basic counters, our advanced RUNTOP models actually scan the value of each individual note as it passes, allowing you to load an entirely mixed stack and receive a total value. You see it here: after processing a mixed pile of notes like the one originally loaded, the screen provides a real-time dollar total ($16,550 in this example), not just a piece count.
Automated Reports But wait, there's more. The value counter doesn't just display the total; it builds a comprehensive report. It details exactly how many of each denomination made up that final total. When finalizing a till or preparing a bank deposit, this instant breakdown of notes ($5s, $10s, $20s, etc.) eliminates human sorting time entirely. This automation means your staff can close sooner, reducing labor costs.