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What to do when a client won't pay

Late payment is the worst part of freelancing — but panic and angry emails rarely help. Here's a calm, effective 5-step plan, plus how to stop it happening again.

1. Send a friendly nudge (assume it slipped)

Most late payments are forgetfulness, not malice. A short, warm reminder with the invoice attached and the amount + original due date in the first line resolves the majority of cases.

2. Follow up on a fixed schedule

Don't wing it. Send reminders at +3, +7 and +14 days — each a little firmer, all in the same email thread so you have a record. Consistency, not harsh wording, is what gets results.

3. Reference your terms

Around the two-week mark, refer to your agreed payment terms and any late fee. Keep it professional: “Per our agreement, invoices are due within 14 days. Please arrange payment by [date].”

4. Send a final notice — then call

If it's ~30 days overdue, send a clear final notice with a hard deadline, stating you'll pause work and pursue recovery if unpaid. Then pick up the phone — a direct, friendly call resolves more than a dozen emails.

5. Escalate if you must

As a last resort: a formal demand letter, small-claims court (cheap and usually lawyer-free for small amounts), or a collections service. Your signed agreement and email trail are your evidence.

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How to prevent it next time

Almost every non-payment traces back to two missing habits: a signed agreement and a deposit before you start (25–50%). Add clear terms, invoice the day you deliver, and require a deposit from new clients — and “won't pay” becomes rare.

General information, not legal advice. Debt-recovery rules vary by country and state; check your local process.