In the small tailoring shops around Ajman city centre, Al Nuaimiya, Al Jerf and Rashidiya, where one owner often measures, stitches and rings up the sale, TailorSync keeps your counter, your kandura and abaya orders and your VAT invoicing in one place. Built in the UAE, priced in AED, and light enough to run from a laptop or phone with no server on site.
Free for 30 days. No card needed. Built for the UAE and GCC.
TailorSync is tailoring-shop ERP and POS software for Ajman, built in the UAE by the family behind a tailoring company with 30 years at the counter and in the workshop. Ajman's trade is built on small, independent shops: a single unit around the city centre, in Al Nuaimiya or Rashidiya, where the same person measures a kandura, stitches an abaya, takes in a hem and rings up the sale. In a value-conscious market like this one, margins are thin and there is no budget for a heavy ERP or an IT person to keep it running. That is the gap TailorSync was made to fill. It puts deposits on custom orders, saved measurements, delivery dates, alterations and FTA-compliant VAT invoicing on one system that runs from a browser, with no server to buy and nothing to install. One owner can run the whole shop on it, and if a second branch opens in Al Jerf, the same login covers both.
Ring up a walk-in sale or take payment on a custom order without any training. One person can serve the counter, take a deposit or full payment, and print an 80mm thermal or A4/A5 receipt. Each till runs on an open and close cash session with a drawer count, so the day still balances even when the owner steps away to cut cloth.
Book a bespoke kandura, a made-to-order abaya or a quick alteration the same way, each with a delivery date, its own price and a stage in the workshop. Move every job from cut to stitched to ready so nothing is forgotten on the rack. Because delivered and completed are separate stages, a customer can bring back an abaya you handed over last month and you book the alteration on that same garment.
Take a customer's measurements once and keep them on their profile: kandura length, shoulder, sleeve, chest, collar and cuffs, or a full set for an abaya. The next time they order you pull the profile up in a click. No re-measuring a regular, no tape-measure photos on WhatsApp, and no notebook that goes missing behind the counter.
Custom work is paid in two goes, so take an advance when the order is booked and settle the balance at collection. Every order shows the total, what has been paid and what is still owed, so a busy owner never loses track of who left a deposit and who still owes on a finished piece.
Ajman is the UAE, so every sale needs a proper tax invoice. TailorSync issues FTA-compliant invoices with sequential, gap-free numbering, 5% VAT and your TRN, in AED as standard. Charge tax-inclusive or tax-exclusive, at retail or wholesale rates, and the figures feed straight into the report you need for your VAT return.
A small shop rarely has an accountant, so the owner reads the numbers directly. One dashboard shows the day's sales, what customers still owe, and what the till should hold at close, without exporting anything to a spreadsheet. When a second shop opens, both branches sit under the same login and the same figures.
How it works
Start a cash session, then ring up a walk-in retail sale, take a deposit on a new kandura or abaya, or book a hem for someone who needs it tomorrow. One person can do all of it between jobs at the machine.
Find the customer or add them, pull up their saved measurements or take a fresh set, and note the garment, fabric and any detail on the order so the work is clear when you sit down to cut.
Move each order through its workshop stages towards the promised date. Whether it is a single abaya or a family's Eid order, you can see at a glance what is cut, stitched, ready or waiting to be collected.
Collect the balance at collection, print an FTA VAT invoice, close the drawer with a count, and read the day's takings and outstanding balances from one screen before you lock up.
For a small, owner-run tailoring shop in Ajman, the best fit is software that handles the real work without the cost or complexity of a big ERP. TailorSync is built in the UAE by the family behind a tailoring company with 30 years in the trade, so it covers deposits on custom orders, saved measurements, delivery dates, alterations and FTA VAT invoicing in one system, priced in AED. It runs from a browser with no server to buy, and a free 30-day trial lets you judge it on your own counter before you spend anything.
Yes. There is a free 30-day trial with the full feature set and no card required, then paid plans start with Starter and move up to Expansion and Enterprise, all priced in AED. A single shop can start on the smallest plan and only pay for more when it adds users or a second branch, so the cost tracks the size of the shop rather than getting ahead of it.
Yes. A bespoke kandura, a made-to-order abaya and a walk-in alteration are all booked as orders with a delivery date, an assigned tailor and their own price, and each moves through the workshop stages to collection. Ready-made pieces sell through the POS, so retail and custom work sit on one set of books and one VAT invoice sequence instead of in separate notebooks.
Yes. Ajman is part of the UAE, so the same FTA rules apply. TailorSync issues FTA-compliant tax invoices with sequential, gap-free numbering and 5% VAT in AED, with your TRN on every invoice, and supports tax-inclusive or tax-exclusive pricing. Tax and finance reports are built in, so the figures for your VAT return come straight from the system.
No. TailorSync is cloud software you run from a browser on a laptop, tablet or phone, so there is nothing to install and no server to keep on site. That suits a small Ajman shop with no IT budget: you sign in and start working, and the same login covers you at the counter, at home doing the books, or at a second branch in Al Jerf or Al Nuaimiya later on.
Start a free 30-day trial of TailorSync and run your counter, your kandura, abaya and alteration orders and your VAT invoicing from one place. Built in the UAE, priced in AED, and light enough for a single owner-run shop in Ajman to start today.