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Jason DePardo
Jason DePardo

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The 5-Stage System for Chasing Late Invoices (Without Burning Bridges)

Late payments are the silent killer of freelance businesses. You did the work. You sent the invoice. And now... crickets.

Most freelancers either send one awkward follow-up email or go straight to threats. Both approaches fail. Here's the 5-stage escalation system that actually works:

Stage 1: The Friendly Reminder (Day 3 After Due Date)

Tone: warm, assumes good intent.

Hi [Name], just a quick note that invoice #[X] for $[amount] was due on [date]. Sometimes these slip through the cracks — no worries! Here's the invoice link for easy reference: [link]

Most late payments are genuinely forgotten. This email recovers 40-50% of them.

Stage 2: The Professional Follow-Up (Day 7)

Tone: professional, adds urgency.

Hi [Name], following up on invoice #[X] which is now 7 days past due. I want to make sure there aren't any issues with the deliverables or payment process. Could you confirm when I can expect payment?

This one catches the "I meant to pay but kept putting it off" crowd.

Stage 3: The Firm Notice (Day 14)

Tone: business-like, references terms.

This is a formal notice that invoice #[X] is 14 days overdue. Per our agreement, a late fee of [X%] has been applied. Current balance: $[amount + fee]. Please remit payment within 48 hours.

Now you're referencing the contract. This is where your payment terms clause earns its keep.

Stage 4: The Escalation (Day 21)

Tone: serious, mentions consequences.

This is my final attempt to resolve invoice #[X] directly. If payment is not received by [date], I will be forced to [pause all ongoing work / engage a collections agency / pursue legal remedies].

Most clients pay at this stage. The ones who don't are genuinely problematic.

Stage 5: The Final Demand (Day 30)

Tone: formal, legal-adjacent.

This is a formal demand letter. It references the contract, itemizes all amounts owed including late fees, and states your intended next action with a deadline.


The Decision Framework

Not every late payment deserves all 5 stages. Ask yourself:

  • Is this a repeat offender? Skip to Stage 3.
  • Is the amount under $500? Consider whether the collection cost is worth it.
  • Is this a client you want to keep? Stay at Stages 1-2 longer.
  • Is there a genuine dispute? Pause escalation, resolve the dispute first.

The Complete Kit

I built a Late Payment Invoice Escalation Kit with all 5 email templates, a timing calendar, the decision framework, and an invoice tracking spreadsheet. Everything you need to get paid without burning bridges.


How do you handle late-paying clients? I'd love to hear your strategies in the comments.

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