From the kandura ateliers around Al Jimi and the Town Centre to the abaya workshops of Al Mutaredh and Al Bawadi, TailorSync runs your counter, your workshop and your VAT invoicing in one system. Al Ain is part of the Abu Dhabi emirate, so your tax invoices are FTA-compliant and priced in AED from the first receipt.
Free for 30 days. No card needed. Built for the UAE and GCC.
TailorSync is tailoring-shop ERP and POS software for Al Ain, built in the UAE by the family behind a tailoring company with 30 years at the counter and in the workshop. Al Ain is the Garden City, an inland part of the Abu Dhabi emirate out near the Oman border, and it holds one of the strongest Emirati populations in the country. That gives its tailors a steady, traditional trade: bespoke kanduras for men, made-to-measure abayas for women, and the run of alterations and repairs that keep a family's wardrobe right between one Eid and the next. Generic retail software, written by people who have never taken a measurement or promised a delivery date, cannot hold that work. TailorSync can, because it was shaped by decades of doing it, so a regular's saved measurements, the deposit on a new kandura, the fabric it uses and the FTA-compliant VAT invoice all sit on one set of books. Whether you run a single shop in Al Bawadi or several across the city, it keeps retail sales, custom orders and tax reporting in order while your tailors stay on the machines.
Book each kandura or bespoke commission with its measurements, delivery date and assigned tailor, then move it through production statuses to collection. Deposits and running balances stay clear on every order, whether it is one thobe for a young man or a full set for a family before Eid.
Take made-to-order and altered abayas with the fabric, colour and hand-work recorded on the order, an advance up front and a delivery date the workshop can keep. A piece a customer likes on the rail can be customized to her size at the counter, so a shelf abaya becomes a made-to-measure order without re-keying it.
Keep each customer's kandura or abaya measurements (length, shoulder, sleeve, chest, collar and neck style, cuffs and tarboosha detail) on a saved profile, ready to reuse on the next order without a re-measure. In a city where families come back year after year, that is the end of the missing notebook and the measurements sent over WhatsApp.
Log a hem, a take-in or a repair at the counter in seconds as a priced service, with its own ready-by date and the tailor handling it. Small jobs and big commissions share one queue, so a two-minute alteration is not lost behind a wedding order, and a customer always knows when to come back.
Ring up walk-in and account sales, take a deposit or full payment, and print on 80mm thermal or A4/A5. Every till runs on an open/close cash session with drawer reconciliation, so a busy Thursday still balances at close.
Al Ain sits inside the Abu Dhabi emirate, so the same UAE rules apply: FTA-compliant tax invoices with sequential, gap-free numbering, 5% VAT and AED as standard. Charge tax-inclusive or tax-exclusive, at retail or wholesale rates, and let the figures feed straight into your VAT report.
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 log a quick alteration for a customer who needs it back this week.
Pull up the customer's saved profile if they have visited before, or create one, then record the measurements, chosen fabric and garment details on the order so the tailor has everything to hand.
Hand each job to a tailor and move it through production statuses towards its delivery date, watching low-stock alerts so no fabric shortage holds up the bench during the Eid and National Day rush.
Collect the balance at collection, issue an FTA VAT invoice, close and reconcile the drawer, then review sales, receivables and stock across every Al Ain branch from one dashboard.
For an Al Ain kandura or abaya shop, the best fit is software that understands the trade rather than a generic retail till. TailorSync is built in the UAE by the family behind a tailoring company with 30 years at the counter, so it models the real workflow: reusable measurement profiles, deposits on custom orders, delivery-date promises, alterations, fabric stock and FTA VAT invoicing, all in one system priced in AED. There is a free 30-day trial, so you can judge it against a normal day in your own shop before you decide.
Yes. Al Ain is part of the Abu Dhabi emirate, so UAE VAT rules apply in full. TailorSync issues FTA-compliant tax invoices with sequential, gap-free numbering and 5% VAT in AED, and supports both tax-inclusive and tax-exclusive pricing as well as separate retail and wholesale rates. Tax and financial reports are built in, so the figures for your VAT return come straight from the system.
Yes. A bespoke kandura, a made-to-measure abaya and a quick hem are all booked in the same system. Custom pieces are tracked as orders with measurements, a deposit, a delivery date and an assigned tailor, while a small alteration is logged as a priced service with its own ready-by date. Fine tailoring and fast counter work sit on one set of books, so nothing ends up in a separate notebook.
Yes. Every client has a saved measurement profile (length, shoulder, sleeve, chest, collar and neck style, cuffs and tarboosha detail) that you reuse on the next order in a click. That suits Al Ain, where families come back season after season: a returning customer is never re-measured from scratch, and their order history stays on file for reference.
Yes on both. TailorSync is multi-branch, so shops in Al Jimi, the Town Centre, Al Mutaredh or anywhere else in the UAE run under one account, each with its own sales, orders, stock and cash sessions, and you can share resources between them if you choose. There is a free 30-day trial with the full feature set and no card required, after which paid plans are Starter, Expansion and Enterprise, priced in AED.
Start a free 30-day trial of TailorSync and bring the counter, the workshop and your VAT invoicing together. Built in the UAE, priced in AED, from a single shop in Al Jimi to a chain across the Garden City.