If a client is late paying, most freelancers jump straight to the reminder email.
That makes sense, but it is usually the second problem, not the first.
The first problem is that the admin around the project was too loose before the invoice went overdue.
If I were tightening this up for a UK freelance business this week, I would fix these three things in this order.
1) Put the payment terms inside the contract, not inside your head
A lot of late payment stress starts because the agreement was vague.
If the contract does not clearly say when payment is due, what happens if it is late, whether work pauses, and when IP transfers, you end up trying to negotiate from a weak position after delivery.
The clauses I would always make explicit are:
- exact due date
- deposit or staged payment rule
- late payment / interest wording
- right to pause work on overdue invoices
- IP transfer only after final payment
Even one clean contract update can prevent a surprising amount of chasing later.
2) Pre-write the whole reminder ladder
Most people do not need to become better writers. They need to stop improvising.
If every reminder email is written from scratch, you lose time and you soften your wording because you are trying not to sound rude.
A better setup is a sequence you can reuse:
- invoice sent
- polite due-date reminder
- firmer follow-up
- final demand
- escalation notice if needed
That turns chasing from an emotional task into an admin task.
3) Track overdue money separately from general admin
One mistake I see a lot is keeping overdue invoices buried inside a bigger spreadsheet with everything else.
If you cannot instantly see:
- who owes you
- how overdue it is
- what was last sent
- what the next step is
...you will delay follow-up and cashflow gets foggy very quickly.
A simple overdue tracker is often enough. You do not need a complicated system. You need visibility.
The order matters
If I were fixing this properly, I would do it like this:
- tighten contract wording
- build the reminder sequence
- create the overdue tracker
That order matters because it goes:
- prevention
- recovery
- visibility
Not glamorous, but profitable.
If you want templates instead of building this from scratch, I keep the practical versions in Landolio:
- Freelancer Contract Template Pack for the payment clauses and scope protection
- Invoice Email Pack for the full reminder wording
- Getting-Paid Toolkit if you want the full contracts + reminders + escalation system in one place
But even if you use your own docs, fix the system before the next invoice goes overdue.
What is causing more pain in your business right now: weak terms, awkward follow-ups, or poor tracking?
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