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Dealing with Late Payments Quick Reference Handbook

This Quick Reference Handbook is designed to help you at any stage of dealing with late payments, so you understand your actions and potential actions.

It’s important to remember:

If you’ve got an overdue invoice

(i.e. payment not received before the due date or 30 days since the invoice date if no terms agreed)

1-2 days overdue:

2 weeks overdue:

If you’ve unsuccessfully chased an invoice for over 30 days

(i.e. more than 30 days since the payment due date, or 60 days since the invoice date if no terms agreed)

If your invoice has been paid late

(i.e. past the agreed payment due date, or beyond 30 days from the invoice date if no terms agreed)

Avoiding late payments in the first place

Prevention is always better than dealing with overdue invoices.

Before you send an invoice

After you send an invoice

Your Rights

As a sole-trader or limited company, you have rights to charge interest and surcharges on overdue payments from another UK business, under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 - whether you have included this in your contract or not.

The interest you can charge if another business is late paying for goods or a service is ‘statutory interest’ - this is 8% plus the Bank of England base rate for business to business transactions. You cannot claim statutory interest if there’s a different rate of interest in a contract.

You can also charge a business a fixed sum for the cost of recovering a late commercial payment on top of claiming interest from it.

This right is enshrined in law. You do not have to have previously told your client that you will be charging them interest or late fees - however it is a good idea to communicate this clearly.

Unfortunately, this law does not protect you when working with clients outside of the UK, and we no longer have agreements with the EU around chasing late payments, since Brexit.

Regardless of the law, if you are working with a client without a contract in place, it can make things much harder to demand payment, interest or surcharges. Make sure you always have a contract in place before starting work.

Further Support

There are number of organisations who can offer you additional support, should you be dealing with a late payment, or the impact of a late payment.

Disclaimer

While we strive to ensure the accuracy of the information on this website, it is provided for general informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal or financial advice. We disclaim any liability for any actions taken or not taken based on the content of this website or any third-party content referenced herein. Users are advised to seek independent legal and financial advice tailored to their specific circumstances.

Freelancing Support is the impartial and independent guide to independent work. We help freelancers find support, navigate self-employment and work well.