Letter chasing payment before legal action
Late payment by customers is just one of the problems an accountant has to face. Fortunately, there is a way to wake up the people who owe you money, and get them to do something about it.
Last chance
Most businesses want to avoid costly and time-consuming litigation, so when you show them that you mean business they will most often pay up to avoid extra hassle. So a letter from you that looks like a formal legal notification of an impending lawsuit is a way of saying to your customer “this is your last chance”. Indeed these letters normally get passed to the owners of the business rather than the person who (misguidedly) thinks they are doing their employer a favour by not paying you.
It’s always best to keep such letters as simple as possible. You may have all sorts of issues involving your trading relationship that you would like to point out, but this is not the place for such a discussion.
There’s no official legal form which your chaser letter has to take. However, you need to include all the essential information such as: what the sale was (invoice reference and date), how much is owed, for how long, and your payment information. You then set a final deadline for payment. This can be any reasonable period from one week (it would be hard for payment to reach you in less than a week) to 30 days. Ten days is perfectly reasonable assuming you have already been waiting a long time for payment.
Using our Letter Chasing Payment Before Legal Action should help get slow/late payers back on track.
Related Topics
-
Cut your losses to get a tax refund
You invested in a company that’s now in dire straits and your shares are worth next to nothing. Selling them isn’t an option so how do you go about getting some tax back on your bad investment?
-
HMRC updates advisory fuel rates from 1 March 2026
HMRC has published the latest advisory fuel and electric rates (AFRs) for company cars, effective from 1 March 2026. Several rates have changed since the previous quarter. What should employers be aware of?
-
5 April deadline approaching for key tax relief claims
With the end of the 2025/26 tax year now less than seven weeks away, business owners and company directors should remember that several valuable reliefs and elections must be made before 5 April. Which opportunities are about to close?