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How to send an invoice email that gets paid, UK freelancer templates

How to send an invoice email that gets paid, UK freelancer templates

A lot of invoice problems start before the invoice is overdue.

The PDF can be fine, but the covering email is vague, has no due date in plain English, and gives the client no reason to prioritise it.

Here is the simple structure I use.

1. Put the due date in the subject line

Good:

  • Invoice INV-042, due 30 April 2026
  • March retainer invoice, due 30 April
  • Phase 2 invoice, due on receipt

If the accounts person forwards it internally, the essentials travel with it.

2. State three facts in the first paragraph

Your first paragraph should cover:

  • what the invoice is for
  • the amount
  • the due date

Example:

Hi [Name], please find invoice INV-042 for website copywriting work completed this month. The amount due is £800 and payment is due by 30 April 2026.

That removes ambiguity immediately.

3. Make payment friction low

Do not make the client hunt for details.

Include:

  • bank transfer or checkout details
  • the invoice attached as PDF
  • a clear ask, for example: Please confirm once payment has been arranged.

4. Use a reminder ladder instead of improvising

If the invoice goes late, use a predictable sequence:

  • day 1: polite reminder
  • day 7: firmer follow-up asking for a payment date
  • day 14: reference the agreed terms
  • day 21+: pause delivery or escalate according to the contract

The point is consistency. Most freelancers lose time because every reminder is written from scratch.

5. Fix the contract before you fix the reminder

Late payment is often a contract and process problem, not just a wording problem.

If you are still doing project work without a deposit, milestone schedule, or a payment-on-delivery clause, the reminder email is carrying too much weight.

For UK freelancers, the most useful admin stack is usually:

  • a contract with clear payment terms
  • an invoice email template for first send and follow-ups
  • a final demand template for the awkward cases

I keep all three together because they work better as a system than as separate documents.

If you want the full copy-paste versions, I’ve got the longer guide here:

And if you want the ready-made templates rather than building your own stack from scratch:

What wording has actually improved payment speed for you?

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