Late payments are one of the most stressful parts of freelancing. You’ve done the work, sent the invoice, and now you’re waiting. Here’s how to follow up professionally without burning the relationship.
First: Assume It’s an Oversight
Most late payments aren’t malicious. Clients get busy, invoices end up in the wrong folder, or the accounts payable process takes longer than expected. Start from a place of assuming it’s an honest oversight โ your tone will be better for it.
The Follow-Up Sequence
Day 1 After Due Date: Polite Reminder
Send a brief, friendly email. Subject: “Invoice #INV-042 โ gentle reminder”
Hi [Name], just a quick note to follow up on Invoice #INV-042 for [amount], which was due on [date]. Please let me know if you have any questions or if there’s anything I can help with to process payment. You can pay online here: [link]
Day 7: Follow-Up
If no response, follow up again โ slightly more direct.
Hi [Name], following up on my email from [date] regarding Invoice #INV-042 for [amount]. Could you let me know the expected payment date? I’d appreciate an update.
Day 14: Formal Notice
Now you can mention your late fee policy if you have one.
Hi [Name], Invoice #INV-042 for [amount] is now [X] days overdue. As per our agreement, a late fee of [X]% has been applied. Please arrange payment by [date] to avoid further charges. Payment link: [link]
Automate the Reminders
You don’t have to write these manually every time. Invoicely.live sends automated reminders before and after the due date. You configure it once in Settings and it handles the follow-ups for every invoice automatically.
When to Escalate
After 30+ days with no response or payment, consider a formal letter, a debt collection agency, or small claims court depending on the amount. For most freelancers, the automated reminder + Pay Now button combination prevents things from ever reaching this stage.