Verified Accuracy

Numbers you can trust

A distillery runs on numbers that have to be right: the proof gallons on a TTB report, the excise owed on a removal, the true cost of a barrel, the value on the floor. Spirit Sight's numbers are independently verified across all 68 modules and guarded by 366 automated reconciliation checks that fail the moment a figure would drift.

What was verified

Every module, against the source

Federal compliance

Proof-gallon math, the CBMA tiered excise rates, the temperature-correction gauging tables, and the operational reports were checked against the CFR and TTB source material, cell by cell where the tables are scanned.

The books that tie out

The general ledger balances by construction, every subledger reconciles to it, and the financial statements foot, verified by recomputing each figure from the raw journal entries.

UK and EU duty

The HMRC warehouse return and EU EMCS duty math were verified against gov.uk and the current rates, so a UK or EU operation's duty ties out the same way TTB does.

Inventory and value

Proof gallons are conserved end to end, and every inventory figure can be proven two independent ways, so the value on a report matches the value in the rickhouse.

How

Accuracy that is tested, not asserted

Recompute from source

Verification did not trust the software's own totals. It recomputed money, proof gallons, and inventory independently from the underlying records and required an exact match.

366 automated checks

Each verified rule is pinned by a reconciliation test that fails if the number drifts. The suite runs continuously, so a report can never quietly disagree with the ledger.

Adversarial review to convergence

Independent review passes were run to actively find errors, round after round, until two consecutive passes found none. Corrections were made against the primary source, not a summary of it.

Why it matters

The floor, the filing, and the books agree

Filing becomes a review

When the proof-gallon math is verified and the reports build from your activity, a TTB filing is a five-minute review rather than a weekend of reconciliation.

Audit-defensible by design

Column-level change tracking records who changed what and when, and the numbers reconcile, so a question from an auditor has an answer with a history behind it.

Decisions on real numbers

Cost per barrel, margin by channel, and the value of aging stock are computed, verified figures, so you plan against the same numbers that are in the rickhouse.

See the verified numbers in your own distillery

The same audited math runs the free distiller calculators and the full platform. Try the tools, or see Spirit Sight on your own barrels.

Schedule a demo Try the free calculators