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We support 6 document types required by Mathis Home including:
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Start trading with Mathis Home in days – not weeks.
Stacksync handles the complexity of Mathis Home EDI so your team doesn't have to. Connect your ERP, WMS, or database through a simple API — we translate, validate, and deliver every transaction automatically.
Why thousands of companies use Stacksync to manage EDI
From pre-built Mathis Home mappings to real-time compliance checks, Stacksync removes the friction from EDI — so you can focus on growing your business.
Pre-connected to 10,000+ trading partners
Supports x12, EDIFACT, JSON, and more
Works seamlessly across leading ERPs and systems
Self-service configuration tools for business teams
No custom mapping. No middleware.
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SOC 2 type II
ISO 27001
HIPAA BAA
GDPR
CCPA
DPF US, EU, UK, CH
CSA STAR
SSO & SCIM
Alerts
Secure connection options
Common questions about Mathis Home EDI
Everything you need to know about setting up and managing Mathis Home EDI transactions with Stacksync.
How long does it take to set up Mathis Home EDI with Stacksync?
Most suppliers are fully connected and processing live Mathis Home EDI transactions within 3–5 business days. Stacksync's no-code setup means you don't need developers or EDI consultants — configure your field mappings through our visual interface, run a test cycle, and go live.
What is a Mathis Home EDI 846 Inventory Inquiry/Advice?
A Mathis Home EDI 846 is used to communicate inventory levels between trading partners. Depending on the direction, it can be an inventory inquiry from Mathis Home asking for your current stock levels, or an inventory advice from you reporting available quantities. The document contains item identifiers (UPC, SKU), quantity on hand, quantity available, and location details. Mathis Home uses 846 data for demand planning, replenishment, and dropship availability. Stacksync sends 846 updates automatically from your inventory system, keeping Mathis Home's records current without manual reports or portal uploads.
What fields are required in a Mathis Home EDI 810 Invoice?
Mathis Home EDI 810 Invoices must include the invoice number and date in the BIG segment, the original PO reference number, line-item detail with UPCs, quantities shipped, and unit prices in the IT1 segments, plus the total monetary value in TDS. Mathis Home requires exact alignment between the 810 Invoice, the original 850 Purchase Order, and the 856 ASN — this three-way match prevents deductions and chargebacks. Stacksync cross-validates all three documents automatically before transmitting the 810 to ensure every field matches Mathis Home's accounts payable validation rules.
How quickly must I respond to a Mathis Home 850 with an EDI 855?
Mathis Home compliance programs generally require an EDI 855 Purchase Order Acknowledgment within 24 to 48 hours of receiving the 850. Some Mathis Home business units or time-sensitive product categories may have tighter windows. Failing to acknowledge within the deadline can result in compliance penalties, reduced scorecard ratings, and in some cases automatic PO cancellation. Stacksync can send 855 acknowledgments automatically the moment your system processes the incoming PO, well within Mathis Home's required timeframe. The platform logs every acknowledgment with timestamps for compliance auditing.
What types of changes can be made with a Mathis Home EDI 860?
A Mathis Home EDI 860 Purchase Order Change can modify quantities, prices, delivery dates, ship-to addresses, item substitutions, and add or cancel individual line items on an existing PO. The BCH segment specifies the change type — full replacement, partial change, or cancellation. Mathis Home uses 860s instead of canceling and reissuing entire 850s for efficiency, especially when only a few lines need adjustment. Stacksync processes incoming Mathis Home 860s by automatically updating the original PO record in your system, maintaining a change history for audit purposes.
What information does Mathis Home include in an EDI 850 Purchase Order?
Mathis Home EDI 850 Purchase Orders contain item-level detail including UPCs or GTINs, ordered quantities, unit pricing, ship-to addresses, and requested delivery dates. Key segments like BEG (beginning of the PO), PO1 (line items), N1 (party identification), and CTT (transaction totals) structure the document. Mathis Home sends 850s electronically through their EDI network, and each PO must be acknowledged with an 855 to confirm receipt. Stacksync parses these fields and maps them directly to your ERP or database so orders appear automatically without manual data entry or CSV imports.
How far in advance must a Mathis Home EDI 856 ASN be sent before delivery?
Mathis Home typically requires the EDI 856 Advance Ship Notice to be transmitted within hours of shipment — not days before delivery. The ASN must be sent after the carrier picks up the freight but before the shipment arrives at Mathis Home's receiving dock. Late or missing ASNs often result in compliance chargebacks and can cause receiving delays at the distribution center. Stacksync triggers 856 generation automatically when your WMS or shipping system confirms dispatch, ensuring the ASN reaches Mathis Home within the required window without manual intervention from your logistics team.
How frequently should EDI 846 Inventory updates be sent to Mathis Home?
Mathis Home's required frequency for EDI 846 updates depends on the fulfillment model. Dropship programs often require daily or even intraday inventory feeds — some Mathis Home divisions expect updates every 4 to 6 hours to minimize overselling. Warehouse-replenishment programs may accept weekly 846 updates. Stacksync monitors your inventory system for stock level changes and can send 846 updates on a scheduled interval or when quantities change beyond a configurable threshold, ensuring Mathis Home always has accurate availability data without overwhelming their systems with unnecessary transmissions.
What status codes can be sent in a Mathis Home EDI 855?
The Mathis Home EDI 855 supports several acknowledgment status codes in the BAK and ACK segments: accepted as ordered (AC), accepted with changes (AD), backorder (BO), rejected (RJ), and item not found (IF). You can acknowledge the entire PO at the header level or respond line by line with different statuses — for example, accepting most items while backordering one and rejecting another. Stacksync lets you define business rules that automatically assign these status codes based on your inventory availability, pricing validation, and fulfillment capacity, removing the need for manual line-by-line review.
How does Stacksync prevent Mathis Home EDI 810 Invoice rejections?
Stacksync prevents Mathis Home 810 rejections through automated three-way matching. Before generating an invoice, Stacksync compares line-item quantities and pricing against the original 850 Purchase Order and the 856 ASN. Discrepancies in UPCs, unit prices, quantities, or allowance amounts are flagged before the 810 is transmitted, giving your team a chance to correct errors. The platform also validates Mathis Home-specific formatting requirements like date formats, decimal precision, and required qualifier codes. This preemptive validation eliminates the most common causes of Mathis Home invoice chargebacks.
How quickly does Stacksync process Mathis Home EDI 850 Purchase Orders?
Stacksync processes incoming Mathis Home 850 Purchase Orders in real time, typically within seconds of receipt. The platform validates the X12 envelope, parses all segments, maps fields to your system's schema, and inserts the order record automatically. Unlike batch-processing EDI providers that run on scheduled intervals, Stacksync's event-driven architecture means your team sees new Mathis Home POs immediately. This speed is critical for meeting Mathis Home's tight fulfillment windows and maintaining high on-time in-full compliance scores.
Do I need an existing VAN or AS2 connection to trade with Mathis Home?
No. Stacksync handles the entire EDI transport layer. We connect directly to Mathis Home's trading partner network through our certified connections. You don't need to manage a separate VAN subscription, AS2 certificates, or SFTP configurations.
What is the packaging hierarchy in a Mathis Home EDI 856?
The Mathis Home EDI 856 uses hierarchical levels (HL segments) to describe the shipment structure from top to bottom: shipment level, order level, pack level (cartons or pallets), and item level. Each level contains specific data — the shipment level holds carrier and BOL information, the pack level includes SSCC-18 barcodes and carton dimensions, and the item level lists UPCs and quantities per package. Stacksync builds this hierarchy automatically from your WMS packing data, mapping carton contents and pallet configurations into the correct HL structure required by Mathis Home.
Should Mathis Home cancel and resend an 850 or use an EDI 860?
Mathis Home generally prefers EDI 860 for modifications to existing POs rather than canceling and reissuing the entire 850. The 860 is more efficient because it targets specific changes — a quantity adjustment on one line item, a revised ship date, or an added line — without disrupting the rest of the order. Canceling and reissuing creates a new PO number and can cause confusion in warehouse operations. Stacksync handles both workflows, but when a Mathis Home 860 arrives, it applies the changes incrementally to your existing order record rather than creating a duplicate entry.
Is an EDI 855 required for every Mathis Home Purchase Order?
Most Mathis Home compliance programs require an 855 for every 850 PO received. However, some Mathis Home divisions or product categories may not enforce the requirement, especially for smaller suppliers or specific fulfillment models. Even when not strictly mandatory, sending an 855 is best practice — it confirms receipt, prevents duplicate PO transmissions, and establishes a clear audit trail. Stacksync configures 855 responses per Mathis Home business unit, so you can automate acknowledgments where required while handling exceptions for divisions with different compliance expectations.
How does Stacksync help with Mathis Home compliance?
Stacksync improves compliance scores by eliminating manual processing delays. Purchase Orders sync to your system in real time, ASNs are generated automatically when you ship, and invoices are validated with three-way matching before submission. Real-time monitoring alerts you to issues before they become chargebacks.
What are common reasons a Mathis Home EDI 850 Purchase Order gets rejected?
The most frequent rejection causes for Mathis Home 850s include invalid UPC or GTIN codes, incorrect ship-to location identifiers, quantities that don't match Mathis Home's rounding requirements, and missing mandatory segments. Formatting issues like incorrect date formats in the DTM segment or invalid N1 qualifier codes also trigger rejections. Stacksync validates every incoming Mathis Home 850 against known compliance requirements before syncing to your system, flagging anomalies immediately rather than silently dropping the transaction.
How does Stacksync process Mathis Home EDI 860 changes?
When Stacksync receives a Mathis Home 860, it identifies the original PO by reference number, compares the changed fields against the current order in your system, and applies the updates automatically. Quantity increases or decreases are reflected in your ERP's line items, new lines are appended, and canceled lines are flagged. Stacksync maintains a version history showing what changed and when, making it easy to trace modifications for compliance auditing. If a change conflicts with your fulfillment status (e.g., reducing quantity on items already shipped), Stacksync alerts your team immediately.
What penalties does Mathis Home charge for EDI 856 ASN errors?
Penalties for Mathis Home ASN errors vary by the type of mistake and your compliance scorecard tier. Common chargeable errors include missing or late ASNs, incorrect carton counts, wrong item quantities, invalid SSCC-18 labels, and mismatches between the ASN and actual received goods. These penalties can range from flat fees per incident to percentage-based fines on the shipment value. Stacksync validates every 856 against the original PO data and your shipping records before transmission, catching errors that would otherwise result in Mathis Home chargebacks. The platform maintains an audit trail for dispute resolution.
When should the EDI 810 Invoice be sent relative to shipment for Mathis Home?
Most Mathis Home compliance programs require the EDI 810 Invoice to be sent after the 856 ASN but within a specific window — typically 24 to 72 hours after shipment. Invoicing too early (before the ASN) or too late (beyond the allowed window) can trigger compliance penalties or payment delays. Mathis Home may also require that invoice dates match or follow the ship date on the corresponding 856. Stacksync automates this timing by generating the 810 automatically after the 856 is confirmed, ensuring correct sequencing and compliance with Mathis Home's deadlines.
Is EDI 846 required for Mathis Home dropship programs?
Most Mathis Home dropship programs require EDI 846 Inventory Advice to prevent overselling — if you sell products through Mathis Home's marketplace or website, they need real-time visibility into what you can actually ship. Without accurate 846 data, Mathis Home may list items as available that are actually out of stock, leading to order cancellations and poor customer experience. Stacksync integrates directly with your warehouse management system to push 846 updates automatically whenever stock levels change, ensuring Mathis Home's product listings always reflect your actual fulfillment capacity.
Do I need to respond to a Mathis Home EDI 860 with an 865?
Some Mathis Home trading programs require an EDI 865 (Purchase Order Change Acknowledgment) in response to every 860. The 865 confirms that you received the change request and indicates whether you accept the modifications, reject them, or need further negotiation. Even when not mandatory, sending an 865 is good practice because it closes the communication loop and prevents Mathis Home from resending the same change. Stacksync can generate 865 responses automatically based on your acceptance rules, similar to how it handles 855 PO acknowledgments.
Are SSCC-18 labels required for Mathis Home EDI 856 shipments?
Most Mathis Home programs require SSCC-18 (Serial Shipping Container Code) labels on every carton and pallet, with the corresponding barcodes referenced in the 856 ASN's MAN (Marks and Numbers) segment. The SSCC-18 is a unique 18-digit identifier that links the physical package to the electronic ASN data, enabling Mathis Home's receiving dock to scan and verify shipments against the advance notice. Stacksync generates SSCC-18 numbers that comply with GS1 standards and embeds them in the 856 automatically. If your WMS already assigns SSCC-18s, Stacksync pulls those values directly from your packing records.
Do I need to send an EDI 855 after receiving a Mathis Home 850 Purchase Order?
Mathis Home typically requires an EDI 855 Purchase Order Acknowledgment for every 850 received. The 855 confirms that you received the PO and indicates whether you can fulfill it as ordered, need to modify quantities, or must reject specific line items. Most Mathis Home compliance programs expect the 855 within 24 to 48 hours of PO receipt. Stacksync can generate and send 855 acknowledgments automatically based on your acceptance rules, ensuring you never miss a compliance deadline. A 997 Functional Acknowledgment may also be required as a separate technical receipt.
What happens when inventory reaches zero in an EDI 846?
When an item reaches zero available quantity in your EDI 846, Mathis Home's systems typically remove it from available-to-sell inventory. For dropship, this means the product page may show 'out of stock.' For replenishment, it signals that Mathis Home should hold off on ordering until stock is replenished. It is important to send a zero-quantity 846 rather than simply omitting the item — omission may be interpreted differently by Mathis Home's system. Stacksync handles zero-quantity items explicitly and can optionally suppress items below a safety stock threshold to prevent overselling.
What causes Mathis Home EDI 810 chargebacks and deductions?
The most common causes of Mathis Home 810 chargebacks include price discrepancies between the invoice and the PO, quantity mismatches between the invoice and the ASN, missing or incorrect allowance and charge amounts in the SAC segment, and wrong UPC or item identification codes. Late invoicing beyond Mathis Home's deadline also triggers deductions. Stacksync reduces these errors by automatically populating 810 fields from the matched 850 PO and 856 ASN data, ensuring consistency across all three documents and tracking deduction trends for resolution.
What EDI document types does Stacksync support for Mathis Home?
Stacksync supports all EDI document types required by Mathis Home — including Purchase Orders (850), Invoices (810), ASNs (856), PO Acknowledgments (855), and more. Our platform handles the full lifecycle from order to payment automatically.
What happens if I reject a line item in a Mathis Home EDI 855?
When you reject a line item in the Mathis Home 855 using the RJ status code, Mathis Home's ordering system is notified that you cannot fulfill that specific item. Depending on Mathis Home's policies, they may issue a revised 850 with alternative items, cancel the line, or source the product from another supplier. Partial rejections — where you accept some lines and reject others — are common and supported through line-level ACK segments. Stacksync tracks rejected lines and can trigger alerts so your sales or fulfillment team can follow up with Mathis Home proactively.
Can Stacksync automate Mathis Home EDI 855 responses?
Yes. Stacksync automates Mathis Home 855 responses by connecting to your inventory and order management systems. When a Mathis Home 850 arrives, Stacksync checks stock levels, validates pricing against your catalog, and confirms fulfillment capacity. Based on configurable business rules, it generates the appropriate 855 with acceptance, modification, or backorder status codes — all without manual intervention. You can set thresholds for automatic acceptance (e.g., accept if all items are in stock) and escalate edge cases to your team for review. The entire response cycle typically completes in under a minute.
Can pricing be changed through a Mathis Home EDI 860?
Yes, Mathis Home can modify unit pricing on existing PO line items through the EDI 860. Price changes appear in the PO1 segment with updated unit price values. However, pricing changes via 860 may be subject to Mathis Home's vendor agreement terms — some programs restrict supplier-initiated price changes and only allow buyer-initiated modifications. Stacksync validates incoming Mathis Home 860 price changes against your contracted pricing and flags discrepancies. Your team can review and approve price adjustments before they flow into your billing system, preventing unexpected margin impacts.
How does Stacksync map Mathis Home EDI 850 fields to my ERP system?
Stacksync uses a visual field mapping interface to connect Mathis Home 850 segments — such as BEG for PO header data, PO1 for line items, and N1 for party identification — to the corresponding fields in your ERP, WMS, or database. You configure the mapping once, and Stacksync applies it to every subsequent Mathis Home 850 automatically. The platform handles data type conversions, conditional logic for optional fields, and Mathis Home-specific formatting requirements. If Mathis Home changes their 850 specification, Stacksync alerts you and suggests mapping updates.
How does Stacksync automate Mathis Home EDI 846 inventory feeds?
Stacksync connects to your inventory management system, WMS, or ERP and pulls real-time stock data including quantity on hand, available-to-promise, and backorder quantities. The platform formats this data into the 846 document structure with proper UPC/SKU identifiers, location codes, and quantity qualifiers. You configure the transmission schedule — hourly, daily, or event-triggered — and Stacksync handles the rest. The platform also tracks Mathis Home's inventory receipts so you can identify discrepancies between your reported inventory and what Mathis Home has actually received.
Can Stacksync handle Mathis Home EDI 810 tax and allowance calculations?
Yes. Stacksync supports the SAC (Service, Promotion, Allowance, or Charge) and TXI (Tax Information) segments used in Mathis Home 810 Invoices. The platform can apply Mathis Home-specific allowance schedules, cooperative advertising deductions, and volume rebates automatically based on the terms in the original PO. Tax calculations are handled according to the ship-to jurisdiction. Stacksync maps these calculations from your billing system's output to the correct EDI segment codes and qualifiers, ensuring Mathis Home receives properly formatted financial data.
How does Stacksync generate Mathis Home EDI 856 ASNs from my warehouse system?
Stacksync connects to your WMS, ERP, or shipping platform and monitors for shipment confirmations. When an order is marked as shipped, Stacksync extracts the packing details — carton contents, weights, dimensions, carrier information, tracking numbers, and SSCC-18 labels — and constructs the 856 ASN document automatically. The platform maps your warehouse data to Mathis Home's required HL hierarchy, populates the BSN, TD1, and REF segments, and validates the complete document before transmitting it. The entire process runs without manual EDI formatting, reducing ASN errors and keeping your Mathis Home compliance scores high.
Can I connect Mathis Home EDI to my existing ERP or WMS?
Yes. Stacksync integrates with any system that has a database or API — including SAP, Oracle, NetSuite, Microsoft Dynamics, and custom-built ERPs. Data flows bidirectionally between Mathis Home's EDI network and your system in real time.
What happens when Mathis Home updates their EDI specifications?
Stacksync monitors Mathis Home's EDI spec changes and updates our mappings proactively. When a change affects your integration, we notify you and apply updates — so you stay compliant without scrambling to decode new implementation guides.






