Skip to content
Online Invoicing Best Practices: Get Paid Faster
Accounting & Finance

Online Invoicing Best Practices: Get Paid Faster

3 min readBy Editorial Team
Last updated:

Online Invoicing Best Practices: Get Paid Faster Late payments are one of the most common challenges for small businesses. The average small business invoice is paid 8 days late, and many wait 30-60 days or longer. The

Online Invoicing Best Practices: Get Paid Faster

Late payments are one of the most common challenges for small businesses. The average small business invoice is paid 8 days late, and many wait 30-60 days or longer. The good news is that most late payments are preventable — through better invoicing practices, clear payment terms, and the right tools.

Why Invoices Get Paid Late

Before fixing the problem, understand why it happens:

Free B2B SaaS Tools for SMBs newsletter

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

  • Invoice arrives late: Invoicing after a project is complete rather than immediately on completion creates delays from the start
  • Unclear payment terms: Clients claim they did not know when payment was due
  • Invoice goes to the wrong person: It landed in a shared inbox or was sent to someone without payment authority
  • Inconvenient payment method: The client has to mail a check rather than click a link
  • Invoice not received: Spam filters are real, and PDF attachments sometimes disappear

Best Practices for Faster Invoice Payment

1. Invoice Immediately Upon Completion

The moment a project ends, deliverable ships, or milestone is hit, send the invoice. Psychological research on payment timing shows that invoices sent within 24 hours of work completion have significantly higher on-time payment rates than those sent days later.

For recurring work, set up automatic recurring invoices in your software so billing happens on a schedule without manual action.

2. Use Clear, Specific Payment Terms

Vague terms like "payment due upon receipt" are frequently interpreted generously. Be explicit:

  • Net 7, Net 14, Net 30: State exactly when payment is due
  • Due date on the invoice: Show the specific date, not just the term period
  • Late fees: State your policy (e.g., 1.5% per month after due date)

Research consistently shows that Net 7 and Net 14 terms are paid faster than Net 30, partly because shorter windows create urgency.

3. Add an Online Payment Link

Clients who receive an invoice with a "Pay Now" button pay faster than those who have to initiate a bank transfer or write a check. Every major invoicing platform (QuickBooks, FreshBooks, Wave, Stripe) offers hosted payment links.

Accept credit cards even if you prefer ACH — many clients will pay by card immediately rather than schedule an ACH transfer for later.

4. Send to the Right Person

Before sending the invoice, confirm the exact email address for the accounts payable contact. At larger clients, this is often not the same person you worked with on the project. A quick "Who should I address invoices to?" question before the project ends saves weeks of delays.

5. Follow Up Proactively

Do not wait for late invoices to become overdue invoices. A standard follow-up cadence:

  • 3 days before due date: Friendly reminder ("Your invoice is due on [date] — let me know if you have any questions")
  • 1 day after due date: Polite follow-up ("Just checking in on invoice #123 which was due yesterday")
  • 7 days past due: Firmer follow-up with late fee notice
  • 14-21 days past due: Phone call and formal overdue notice

Most invoicing platforms (FreshBooks, QuickBooks, Wave) automate this sequence so you are not manually chasing every invoice.

6. Offer Early Payment Incentives

A 2/10 Net 30 term (2% discount if paid within 10 days) motivates clients who actively manage their accounts payable. For large invoices, this is a cost-effective way to accelerate cash flow.

7. Require a Deposit for New Clients

For new client relationships, a 25-50% deposit before work begins accomplishes two things: it confirms payment intent, and it creates a sense of obligation that motivates payment of the remaining balance upon completion.

8. Use Professional Invoice Design

Poorly designed invoices with missing information create friction. Every invoice should include:

  • Your business name, address, and contact information
  • Client name and billing address
  • Unique invoice number for reference
  • Invoice date and due date
  • Itemized description of work or products
  • Subtotal, applicable taxes, and total amount due
  • Payment methods accepted
  • Bank details or payment link

Choosing Invoicing Software

Most accounting platforms include invoicing. Dedicated invoicing tools add workflow features:

QuickBooks Online — Best for integration with full accounting workflow. FreshBooks — Best for service businesses that track time by project. Wave — Best free option for straightforward invoicing needs. Invoice Ninja — Excellent open-source option for tech-savvy users.

Our Recommendation

Combine immediate invoicing, explicit payment terms, an online payment link, and automated reminders. This combination alone can cut average days-to-payment by half. For most small businesses, FreshBooks or QuickBooks Online provides everything you need to implement all of the above.

Affiliate Disclosure

This article may contain affiliate links. If you make a purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no additional cost to you.
#accounting & finance
#b2b saas tools for smbs
#guide
#online invoicing bes
💳

Free Download

Merchant Services Comparison Chart

Side-by-side comparison of 12 payment processors: interchange rates, monthly fees, contract terms, chargeback policies, and best-fit business types.

Stop overpaying on processing fees

Download Free Chart
Newsletter

Stay in the Loop

Get the latest B2B SaaS Tools for SMBs reviews, deals, and expert tips delivered straight to your inbox.

No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. Privacy Policy

More Articles