Invoice Follow-Up Email Templates

Browse best-performing invoice follow-up email templates for overdue payment reminders, covering polite first notices, firm second requests, final payment demands, and what to do when payment still doesn't come.

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6 templates d'emails
Invoice [[invoice number]]: open to a payment plan

Hi {{first_name}},

I understand that cash flow can be unpredictable. If paying Invoice [[invoice number]] ([[amount]]) in full right now isn't feasible, I'm open to discussing a payment schedule.

Could you let me know what timeline would work on your end? I'd rather find a solution that works for both of us than let this sit unresolved.

[[Your name]]

Invoice [[invoice number]]: final notice before next steps

Hi {{first_name}},

This is a final notice regarding Invoice [[invoice number]] for [[amount]], now [[number]] days overdue. I've sent several reminders without a response.

If payment is not received by [[date]], I will need to [[specific consequence per your contract: apply the late fee outlined in our agreement, refer this account to collections, or engage a third party for resolution]].

I'd much rather resolve this directly. Please reply with a payment date or call me at [[your phone number]] to discuss.

[[Your name]]

Invoice [[invoice number]]: work paused until payment is received

Hi {{first_name}},

Invoice [[invoice number]] for [[amount]] has been outstanding since [[original due date]]. Per our agreement, I'm pausing work on [[project name]] until this invoice is cleared.

I'd prefer to resolve this quickly and get back on track. Could you confirm a payment date?

Amount due: [[amount]] Invoice number: [[invoice number]] Original due date: [[date]]

[[Your name]]

Payment reminder: Invoice [[invoice number]], [[amount]] overdue

Hi {{first_name}},

Following up on Invoice [[invoice number]] for [[amount]], which was due on [[date]]. I sent a reminder on [[date of first reminder]] and haven't received a response.

Could you check with your accounts team and let me know when this will be processed? Payment details are below for reference:

Amount: [[amount]] Invoice number: [[invoice number]] Payment method: [[bank transfer / payment link / other]]

[[Your name]]

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Frequently asked questions

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Send your first invoice reminder on the due date or one day after. Waiting a week before following up on a late invoice signals that the deadline is flexible, which sets the wrong expectation for future payments.

The first reminder should be polite and assume the delay is an oversight. Most late payments at the one-to-two day mark are exactly that: someone forgot to process it or it got stuck in their approval queue. A direct, professional note that restates the invoice amount and due date is enough for this first email.

Each follow-up should be self-contained: the client shouldn't need to find your previous note to act on it. That means the invoice number, the amount, the due date, and your payment instructions in every message you send.

A neutral opener works better than an apologetic one. "This is a reminder that Invoice [Number] for [Amount] was due on [Date]" states the facts without framing the request as an inconvenience. Attach the original invoice to every follow-up so the client doesn't need to search for it.

For invoices more than two weeks overdue, the tone should shift from reminder to notice. Keep it professional but direct about next steps: "Invoice [Number] is now [X] days overdue. Please confirm payment by [Date] or contact us to discuss." Don't soften the language with filler openers like "I hope this finds you well." Those undercut the seriousness of the message.

If you are working under a project-based contract, this is also the stage where you can note that work is paused until the invoice is cleared. State this factually, not as a threat.

Clear and direct subject lines work best. "Invoice [Number]: Payment Due [Date]" leaves no ambiguity about the content. "Payment reminder: Invoice [Number], [Amount] overdue" works well for the second or third follow-up when you want the overdue status in the subject itself.

Avoid softening the subject line too much. "Quick note about your account" or "Checking in on payment" can be ignored because they don't signal the content clearly. The client shouldn't need to open the email to know it is about an outstanding invoice.

Separate the business problem from the personal relationship. You can be professional and firm about an overdue invoice without implying the client is acting in bad faith.

Stick to the facts: the invoice number, the amount, and what you need from them. Avoid language that assigns blame: "I've been waiting for this payment for weeks" puts the client on the defensive and makes the conversation harder than it needs to be. For a client with a strong track record, a brief acknowledgment works well: "I know things get busy. Can you let me know when this one will be processed?" That keeps the professional relationship intact while still asking for what you're owed.

If a client indicates they're having cash flow issues, a payment plan is worth considering before escalating. "Happy to discuss a payment schedule if that helps" is a low-pressure way to open that door. Partial payment on a defined schedule is a better outcome than a collections process, and it gives a client who genuinely can't pay in full right now a way to stay in good standing.

Repeated promises without payment are a different problem from a slow-paying client. The pattern ("payment is coming this week," then silence, then another promise) usually means the client is managing cash flow at your expense, whether intentionally or not.

Move from email to a phone call. A direct conversation is harder to defer than a written message and often surfaces the real obstacle: a disputed line item, an internal approval bottleneck, or a genuine cash problem they haven't said outright. Ask directly: "Is there anything on the invoice you'd like to discuss before we settle this?" That question either resolves a hidden objection or makes clear there isn't one.

After a call with no resolution, shift to written-only communication with explicit deadlines and consequences stated in every message. "If payment is not received by [Date], I will apply the late fee outlined in our contract and suspend further work." Keep the tone factual. The goal at this stage is a paper trail, not a conversation.

After two or three reminders with no payment and no response, the next step depends on the relationship and the amount. For smaller invoices or one-off projects, a final notice that explicitly states a deadline and a consequence is appropriate. If your contract includes a late fee clause, reference it. If you intend to pause future work or refer the account to collections, say so directly: "This invoice is now [X] days overdue. If payment is not received by [Date], I will need to pause work and refer this account to collections." State this plainly and without apology. The framing is firm but factual, not hostile.

For larger amounts or ongoing relationships, a phone call before the final notice often resolves what emails haven't. Many late payments are stuck in an approval queue rather than being ignored in bad faith, and a call can move that faster than another written reminder.

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