Piso WiFi Sales Report on 10.0.0.1 Admin
Last updated: June 2026
Your Piso WiFi sales report lives in the 10.0.0.1 admin panel and logs every peso the machine earns.
What the Sales Report Shows
The sales report is your machine’s built-in ledger of every coin it takes. It usually logs total earnings, coins sorted by value, active sessions, and a day-by-day breakdown. Read together, those figures become your single source of truth for income, far more reliable than guessing from the weight of the coin box.
A Piso WiFi machine is a coin-operated WiFi device. You drop a coin and get internet time. You open its report through the 10.0.0.1 admin login dashboard.
The report earns its keep in three ways. It is an honest record that settles any split with a location owner. It is an early warning, since a sudden drop often means a jammed coin slot. And it is a growth tool, showing exactly when your machine earns and when it sits idle.
Open the 10.0.0.1 Sales Report
The sales report is owner-only, so you reach it from the admin side of the portal rather than the customer pay screen. The path is short: join your own network, load the panel at 10.0.0.1, sign in, and open the earnings menu. Most boards label that menu Sales, Income, or Reports.
- Connect to your Piso WiFi network.
- Go to http://10.0.0.1 and tap Admin.
- Sign in. Defaults are often admin / admin or blank.
- Open Sales, Income, Reports, or Earnings in the menu.
Brand new to the dashboard? Start with our 10.0.0.1 Piso WiFi login guide. If your password no longer works, the admin password recovery steps explain how to regain access or reset the board safely.
How Do You Read Your Sales Numbers?
Labels shift between board makers, yet the underlying figures are nearly always the same four. Once you know what each field means, the whole report reads at a glance. The table below maps the common labels to what they actually tell you about your machine’s income.
| Field | What It Means |
|---|---|
| Total Income | All pesos collected since the last reset |
| Today / This Period | Earnings for the current day or range |
| Coin Count | Coins by value (P1, P5, P10, P20) |
| Active Sessions | Users online with paid time right now |
Always note the date of the last reset, because it tells you what span the totals cover. Five thousand pesos over one week means something very different from the same figure across three months. If your board can export or screenshot the report, keep a running log; even one photo a day reveals trends fast.
Reconciling the Coin Box Against Cash
Reconciliation simply means comparing what the system says it earned against the cash actually sitting in the box. Done at every collection, this quick check turns the report from a rough estimate into a ledger you can genuinely trust. It also surfaces faults and theft long before they drain real money.
- Read the system’s total income before you open the box.
- Count the physical cash, sorted by value.
- Compare the two. They should match within a peso or two.
- If cash is short, check for a miscount, a jam, or tampering.
- Record the figure, then reset the period counter if your workflow uses it.
A one or two peso gap is normal, since a coin can half-register on its way through the acceptor. A large or growing gap across several collections is a red flag. That pattern usually points to a hardware fault rather than the software, so inspect both the coin slot and who has physical access.
Using the Report to Grow Income
Numbers only pay off when you act on them. Treat the sales report as a feedback loop for small, testable changes, adjusting one thing at a time so you can see what actually moved the needle. Over a few weeks, those tweaks compound into noticeably steadier earnings from the same machine.
- Spot peak hours and days. Make sure the machine is stocked, powered, and online then. Missing your busiest hours is lost income.
- Test rate changes. Use the report to see if income rose or fell. Change one thing at a time.
- Promote slow periods with a prepaid voucher system instead of cutting your rate for good.
- Compare locations if you run several machines, to decide where to invest next.
- Watch for theft. If the system count is healthy but cash is short day after day, investigate who has access.
A machine tuned to its busiest evenings clearly outperforms one run on guesswork. Small, evidence-led changes beat sweeping ones, because you always know which lever produced the result.
Report Missing or Wrong? Quick Fixes
A blank or mismatched report rarely means lost money; it usually points to a reset, a coin-slot fault, or a frozen board. Work through the checks below in order, from the figures themselves to the connection. Each one rules out a common cause before you reach for the power switch.
- Numbers look low? Confirm the coin slot is registering. A faulty acceptor undercounts income.
- Report blank? The period may have been reset. Check the reset date.
- Cannot open the page? Use http://10.0.0.1, clear your cache, and confirm you are on the admin dashboard.
- Board frozen? Power-cycle the machine and reload the report.
If the panel will not load at all, our Piso WiFi login problems guide covers connectivity fixes. Running a different board? The LPB Piso WiFi setup guide details where earnings sit on LPB-style menus.
Frequently Asked Questions (2026)
Where is the sales report on Piso WiFi?
Sign in to the admin panel at 10.0.0.1 and open the Sales, Income, or Reports menu. It shows total earnings, coin counts, and active sessions.
How do I reconcile the coin box with the report?
Read the system’s total income before opening the box, count the physical cash, and compare. A close match is healthy; a shortfall suggests a coin-slot fault or tampering.
Why does my sales report show less than I collected?
A mis-reading coin acceptor undercounts inserts, so the report can lag actual cash. Check and calibrate the coin slot if the gap is consistent.
Can I reset the sales report?
Yes, most boards let the owner reset the period counter. Note the reset date so you know what range your totals cover going forward.
Why is my sales report blank?
It was likely reset, so the current period started over, or the board froze. Check the reset date and power-cycle the machine if the page will not load.