You delivered the work. You sent the invoice. Days pass. Then weeks. The client hasn't paid, and now you're stuck deciding whether to follow up — and if so, what to say without damaging the relationship you spent months building.
This guide covers the complete unpaid invoice follow-up process: why invoices go unpaid, a clear timeline for when to follow up, and ready-to-use scripts for each stage — from a polite nudge to a firm final notice. At the end, there's a better option than doing all this manually.
Why Invoices Go Unpaid (It's Usually Not Malicious)
Before you draft a strongly-worded email, understand what you're actually dealing with. Most late invoices fall into one of six buckets — and the right follow-up approach depends on which one you're facing.
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The invoice got buried
Clients receive hundreds of emails. A short reminder is all it takes — no confrontation needed.
Slow approval process
Larger clients route invoices through accounting or management. Payment can take 2–4 weeks even with full intent to pay.
Invoice dispute
The client has a question or concern they haven't raised. Following up opens the door for them to say so.
Cash flow problem
The client genuinely doesn't have funds right now. A payment plan conversation is usually more productive than pressure.
Missing payment method
No direct payment link, unclear bank details, or an unfamiliar payment method creates friction that delays action.
Bad faith non-payment
Rare, but it happens. These situations require a different approach — escalation, not just reminders.
The first follow-up should assume one of the first five reasons. Escalate to #6 only after multiple attempts with no response.
The Follow-Up Timeline: When to Act at Each Stage
The single biggest mistake small business owners make with unpaid invoices: waiting too long. The longer an invoice sits unpaid, the harder it becomes to collect. Studies on accounts receivable consistently show that invoices unpaid past 90 days have a dramatically higher write-off rate.
Here's the timeline to follow — and the action to take at each stage:
Stage 1: Pre-Due Reminder
A short, friendly heads-up that the invoice is coming due. Not all clients will remember. This nudge catches the forgetter before they become late, and costs you nothing in goodwill — clients appreciate being reminded. How long should you wait? Don't. Send this automatically.
Stage 2: First Overdue Notice
The invoice is now late. Still warm in tone — assume the client forgot or is processing. Reference the invoice number and amount clearly. Offer to help if there's an issue. Most invoices get paid here.
Stage 3: Second Follow-Up
Tone shifts to firm and professional. You're no longer assuming they forgot — you're asking for a response. Reference your previous follow-up. Set an expectation for when you need a reply. Mention late fees if your contract includes them.
Stage 4: Formal Written Notice
This is serious territory. Send a formal email (or letter) with a specific payment deadline — typically 7 business days. Reference your payment terms, any late fees accrued, and state clearly what happens if payment isn't received. This establishes your paper trail for escalation.
Stage 5: Escalation
Options at this stage: collections agency, small claims court, or attorney demand letter. The right choice depends on the amount, your jurisdiction, and your relationship with the client. See the escalation section below.
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Scripts for Every Stage
Use these scripts as starting points. Customize the tone to match your relationship with the client — closer clients can be more casual, corporate clients usually expect more formal language.
Stage 1 Script: Pre-Due Reminder (3 Days Before)
Friendly Pre-Due Reminder
Tone: Warm, informationalStage 2 Script: First Overdue Notice (3 Days Late)
First Overdue Notice
Tone: Friendly, directStage 3 Script: Second Follow-Up (7–14 Days Overdue)
Second Follow-Up
Tone: Firm, professionalStage 4 Script: Formal Written Notice (30 Days Overdue)
Formal Written Notice
Tone: Serious, clear consequencesOnly reference consequences you're actually prepared to follow through on. If you mention late fees, make sure your contract actually includes them. If you mention legal action, be prepared to take it. Empty threats in formal notices damage your credibility and rarely produce payment.
How Long to Wait Before Following Up on an Invoice
The short answer: don't wait long, and follow a schedule. Here's the recommended timing:
| When | Action | Expected outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 3 days before due | Pre-due reminder email | ~30% pay early or on time |
| 3 days after due | First overdue notice | ~50% of remaining pay here |
| 7–14 days after due | Second follow-up (firmer) | ~60% of remaining resolve |
| 30 days after due | Formal written notice + phone call | Most of what's left resolve |
| 60+ days after due | Collections, legal, or write-off | Recovery rate drops sharply |
The key insight: each stage catches more of the remaining unpaid invoices. Don't skip stages or delay — every week of inaction narrows your options.
When to Escalate: Collections, Legal, and Other Options
If you've reached 60+ days with no payment and no response, you're past the reminder phase. Here's what your escalation options actually look like:
Escalation Options (60+ Days Overdue)
- Phone call: Simple and often overlooked. A direct conversation frequently unlocks stuck invoices that email chains couldn't. Do this before any formal escalation.
- Late fees: Apply them if your contract specifies them. Typically 1.5%–2% per month. Mention them in the formal notice. They create real incentive to pay now rather than later.
- Collections agency: Appropriate for larger amounts (generally $1,000+). Agencies typically take 25–50% of recovered funds. It signals you're serious, and many clients pay up before the agency gets involved.
- Small claims court: For amounts within your jurisdiction's limit (typically $5,000–$15,000 in the US). No attorney required. The filing alone sometimes produces payment.
- Attorney demand letter: A formal letter from an attorney has significant weight. Appropriate for amounts over $5,000. Most attorneys charge $150–$400 for a single demand letter.
- Write it off: For small amounts where the recovery cost exceeds the balance, write it off as a business expense and move on. Document it, end the relationship, and require upfront payment for future work.
The right escalation path depends on three variables: how much you're owed, your contract terms, and whether you want to preserve the client relationship. Collections and legal action generally end the relationship — factor that into your decision.
How OfficeHound Automates This Entire Process
Everything above — the timeline, the scripts, the escalating tone — requires consistent execution to work. Most small business owners either forget to follow up, feel awkward about it, or let invoices age while they focus on client work.
OfficeHound handles the entire follow-up sequence automatically:
- ✦ Automated reminder sequence — pre-due, first notice, second follow-up, formal notice — sent on your behalf, in your name, on schedule
- ✦ Invoice tracking dashboard — see every invoice status at a glance: outstanding, overdue, reminded, collected
- ✦ Payment links on every invoice — one-click payment removes friction and speeds up collection
- ✦ Daily financial briefing — know exactly what's outstanding, what's overdue, and what's collected without logging into anything
- ✦ Expense tracking — capture business expenses alongside invoices so you know your real cash position
The scripts in this guide are the right words. OfficeHound handles the timing, the sending, and the tracking — so you can focus on the work instead of the follow-up.
Stop Chasing Invoices Manually.
OfficeHound automates your entire follow-up sequence — friendly to firm — and gives you a daily briefing on what's paid and what's outstanding.
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Frequently Asked Questions
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