How to Chase Late Invoice Payments in the UK: A Practical Guide
Chasing payments is the worst part of running a business. Here's a practical approach that gets results without damaging relationships.
Why Clients Pay Late
Before you chase, understand why:
- Invoice lost or overlooked
- Cash flow problems
- Dispute over work
- Waiting for their own clients to pay
- Disorganisation
- Deliberate delay (unfortunately common)
Knowing the reason helps you respond appropriately.
Step 1: Friendly Reminder (1-7 Days Overdue)
Most late payments are oversights. Start friendly.
Email Template
Subject: Quick reminder — Invoice #1234
Hi [Name],
Hope you're well. Just a quick reminder that invoice #1234 for £[amount] was due on [date].
I've attached a copy in case it's gone astray. If you've already sent payment, please ignore this.
Let me know if you have any questions.
Thanks, [Your name]
Step 2: Firmer Follow-up (7-14 Days Overdue)
If no response, follow up more firmly.
Email Template
Subject: Outstanding invoice #1234 — action required
Hi [Name],
I'm following up on invoice #1234 for £[amount], which is now [X] days overdue.
Please arrange payment within the next 7 days. If there's an issue with the invoice or work, let me know so we can resolve it.
Payment details are on the attached invoice.
Best regards, [Your name]
Step 3: Phone Call (14+ Days Overdue)
Sometimes email isn't enough. Call them.
Key points:
- Stay calm and professional
- Confirm they received the invoice
- Ask when to expect payment
- Get a specific date (not "soon")
- Follow up in writing to confirm
Step 4: Final Notice (21-30 Days Overdue)
Time to mention your legal rights.
Letter Template
FINAL NOTICE — Invoice #1234
Dear [Name],
Despite previous reminders, invoice #1234 for £[amount] remains unpaid, now [X] days overdue.
Please pay within 7 days. If payment is not received, I will:
- Add statutory interest at 8% above the Bank of England base rate
- Add the statutory compensation fee
- Consider debt recovery proceedings
These are my rights under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998.
To avoid this, please pay £[amount] by [date].
Yours faithfully, [Your name]
Your Legal Rights
Statutory Interest
8% + Bank of England base rate per year on overdue amounts.
Statutory Compensation
| Debt Amount | You Can Claim |
|---|---|
| Up to £999.99 | £40 |
| £1,000 – £9,999.99 | £70 |
| £10,000+ | £100 |
Recovery Costs
If your costs exceed the fixed sum, you can claim additional reasonable costs.
Step 5: Debt Recovery Options
If they still don't pay:
Debt Collection Agency
Agencies chase the debt for you, typically charging 15-50% of recovered amounts. Worth it for larger debts.
Small Claims Court
For debts under £10,000, use Money Claims Online. Court fees are often recoverable.
Letter Before Action
Send a formal letter giving 14 days to pay before legal proceedings.
Prevention is Better Than Cure
The best approach is preventing late payment:
- ✓ Invoice immediately
- ✓ Offer multiple payment methods
- ✓ Set clear terms upfront
- ✓ Take deposits for large projects
- ✓ Check credit before extending terms
- ✓ Send automatic reminders
Automate Your Credit Control
Stop spending hours chasing invoices.
With dynamik.app, you can:
- Send automatic payment reminders
- Apply late payment fees
- Track who consistently pays late
- Accept online payments
- See when invoices are viewed
Related Posts
Ready to simplify your business?
Join thousands of UK businesses using dynamik.app for invoicing, accounting, and more.
Get Started Free