An invoice goes out. The due date passes. Nothing arrives. And then begins the uncomfortable internal debate most freelancers know well: Is it too soon to follow up? Will I come across as pushy? What if they're annoyed?
Here's the reality: most late payments are not deliberate. A study by Xero found that the majority of overdue invoices are simply forgotten — buried in an inbox, stuck in an approvals queue, or waiting on someone who's on holiday. The client isn't avoiding you. They've just deprioritized it.
Your job is to reprioritize it. Professionally, directly, and without apology.
Following up on an invoice you're owed is not rude. It's professional. The awkwardness you feel is yours — the client almost certainly isn't thinking about it at all. A confident, direct follow-up is almost always appreciated.
The most effective approach is a structured escalation — starting light and becoming more direct as time passes. Here's the exact timeline:
The clock starts when the invoice lands, not when the work was finished. Send it the same day as delivery.
A brief, warm heads-up. Not an accusation — just a nudge that the due date is approaching.
Direct but still professional. Reference the invoice number and ask for a payment ETA.
More serious tone. Mention your late payment terms if you have them. Ask for a specific date.
Formal. Mention next steps (late fees, debt collection, legal action). Send by email and follow up by phone.
The biggest barrier to following up is not knowing what to say. Here are exact templates you can use — copy, adjust the specifics, send.
Hi [Name],
Just a quick heads-up that Invoice INV-042 for $[amount] is due on [date]. Please let me know if you need me to resend the invoice or if you have any questions.
Thanks, [Your name]
Hi [Name],
I'm following up on Invoice INV-042 for $[amount], which was due on [date]. I haven't received payment yet — could you let me know when I can expect it?
I've attached the invoice again for reference. Please don't hesitate to reach out if there's an issue.
Thanks, [Your name]
Hi [Name],
Invoice INV-042 for $[amount] is now 7 days overdue. I'd appreciate it if you could confirm a payment date by [specific date].
As a reminder, my payment terms include a 1.5% monthly late fee on overdue balances, which will apply from [original due date] if payment is not received shortly.
Please let me know if there's anything I can do to help move this forward.
[Your name]
Dear [Name],
This is a formal notice that Invoice INV-042 for $[amount], originally due on [date], remains unpaid after 30 days. The total now owed, including accrued late fees, is $[updated amount].
If I do not receive payment or a confirmed payment plan by [date — 7 days from now], I will have no choice but to pursue this through a debt collection agency / small claims court.
I hope we can resolve this without further escalation. Please contact me immediately if you'd like to discuss.
[Your name]
If email follow-ups are being ignored — not bouncing, just going unanswered — escalate the channel before escalating the tone.
Call them. A phone call is harder to ignore than an email. Keep it brief and professional: "Hi, I'm calling about Invoice INV-042 that's been outstanding since [date]. Is there anything I can help clarify to get this processed?" Most ignored invoices get resolved on the first call.
If phone doesn't work, try LinkedIn. A brief, professional direct message often gets read when emails don't. Keep the same professional tone — this is not the place for frustration.
After 60 days with no response, your options are: a debt collection agency (they typically take 25–40% but handle all recovery) or small claims court (lower cost, requires more effort, but puts legal pressure on the client).
They apologize. "Sorry to bother you again" and "I hate to chase this" are phrases that undermine your follow-up before it even lands. They signal that you feel guilty for asking to be paid — which is the opposite of the energy you want.
You don't owe anyone an apology for asking to be paid for work you've already delivered. Your follow-up emails should be warm, professional, and direct — never apologetic.
The best follow-up is one you rarely need. A professional invoice with clear terms, an exact due date, and payment instructions gets paid faster. Generate one in seconds — free.
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