How to Negotiate Better Payment Terms with Your Clients

July 10, 2026

How to Negotiate Better Payment Terms with Your Clients

Payment terms are one of the most negotiable elements of any commercial relationship, and one of the least frequently negotiated. Most UK SMEs accept the payment terms their clients propose as fixed conditions, when in practice they are defaults that many clients will adjust without resistance if asked correctly.

This guide explains how to approach the conversation, what typically works, what does not, and where the limits of negotiation lie — both for new clients and existing ones.

Why Payment Terms Matter More Than Most Owners Realise

The difference between 30-day and 60-day payment terms is not just a month. At a turnover of £1 million, 60-day terms mean you are carrying approximately £83,000 of outstanding debtors at any point — money you have earned but not yet received.

At 30-day terms, that figure is approximately £42,000. The difference — £41,000 — is working capital that does not require a finance facility, carries no interest cost, and creates no balance sheet liability.

Reducing debtor days across a portfolio of clients by 15 days can release tens of thousands of pounds of working capital at no cost. No finance product achieves the same result more cheaply.

New Clients: Set Terms at the Outset

The easiest time to establish favourable payment terms is before the first invoice is raised. Once a client has experienced receiving 60-day terms, reducing them to 30 days feels like a deterioration — even if 30 days was always your preference.

State your payment terms clearly in the first contract or proposal. Do not frame them as a request. Present them as your standard terms. Most clients do not challenge standard terms — they accept them as part of the engagement.

If a client proposes longer terms than you want to accept, the negotiation at this stage is straightforward because neither side has yet committed. The response is not to accept the client’s terms and hope — it is to explain your terms and, if necessary, explore whether there are other conditions under which the relationship can work for both parties.

Existing Clients: How to Approach the Conversation

Changing payment terms with an existing client is more delicate because it represents a change to an established arrangement. The approach that works best is one that is commercial, explanatory, and forward-looking rather than apologetic or pressured.

Frame the conversation around your business investment rather than your cash flow difficulty. An owner who says “we are investing in X and are streamlining our payment processes” is in a stronger position than one who says “we are struggling with cash flow and need to be paid faster.” The first signals growth. The second signals difficulty.

Give notice and reasonable lead time. Announcing a change to 30-day terms effective from the next invoice, for a client currently on 60 days, is unreasonable. Announcing the change with 60 days’ notice — and applying it from the start of a new contract year or project — is professional and gives the client time to adjust their own processes.

Be selective about which clients you approach first. Starting with smaller, less critical clients lets you refine the approach and build confidence. Targeting your largest, most relationship-sensitive client as a first attempt is high-risk.

What Works in the Negotiation

  • Offering a modest early payment discount: a 0.5 percent discount for payment within 10 days is inexpensive for many large corporate clients and meaningful for your cash flow. It needs to be positioned as a reward for early payment rather than a penalty for standard payment.
  • Proposing milestone billing on project work: billing in stages — on instruction, on delivery, on sign-off — accelerates cash receipts and is standard practice in many professional service sectors. Many clients accept milestone billing without question if proposed in the initial scope agreement.
  • Moving from monthly to weekly invoicing: for ongoing service contracts, weekly invoicing with weekly terms produces materially faster cash receipts than monthly billing. Many clients’ accounts payable systems process invoices when received rather than accumulating them to month-end.
  • Direct debit collection: for regular, predictable invoices, offering a direct debit arrangement that debits the client on a fixed date eliminates debtor time entirely for those invoices. Some clients prefer the certainty of a fixed debit.

What Does Not Work

Issuing late payment demands and applying statutory interest under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts Act is a legal right but a poor commercial strategy for ongoing client relationships. It signals that the relationship is transactional, invites reciprocal scrutiny of every invoice, and rarely results in improved payment behaviour from the client.

Reducing the quality or timeliness of delivery as an implicit lever — delaying work until previous invoices are paid — creates a dispute risk and reputational damage that exceeds any cash flow benefit.

Repeatedly sending the same invoice without escalation or relationship contact is ineffective. The invoice sits in an accounts payable queue until someone acts on it. That someone is prompted to act by a call, not by a third copy of the same PDF.

When Better Payment Terms Are Not Enough

For businesses operating in sectors where 60 to 90-day payment terms are genuinely standard — construction, recruitment, manufacturing, and some professional services — payment term negotiation reduces the gap but does not close it. The working capital requirement is structural, driven by the terms of the industry rather than individual client relationships.

In these circumstances, invoice discounting provides the most efficient bridge. Rather than waiting for 60-day clients to pay, you can access 80 to 90 percent of the invoice value immediately after it is raised, while maintaining the relationship and the payment terms the client expects. The cost of the facility is typically less than the cost of the working capital problem it replaces.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I charge interest on overdue invoices from UK business customers?

Yes. Under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, UK businesses have a statutory right to charge interest at 8 percent above the Bank of England base rate on overdue business-to-business invoices. You also have the right to claim a fixed debt recovery charge of £40 to £100 depending on the invoice value. Whether to exercise this right depends on the client relationship. For persistent, deliberate late payers with no intention of improving, it can be a useful lever. For clients who are slow but valuable, the conversation approach described above is more productive.

What is a reasonable payment term to request from UK business clients?

Thirty days is the UK standard and the statutory default where no terms are agreed. For most service businesses, 14 to 30 days is commercially reasonable. For product businesses supplying to large retailers or corporate clients, 45 to 60 days may be the sector reality. The goal is not to push to the shortest term the client will technically accept, but to establish terms that create a workable cash flow within your trading model and maintain the relationship.

Should I use a credit checking service before extending payment terms to a new client?

Yes, for any client whose outstanding balance could create a meaningful cash flow problem if they pay late or not at all. Commercial credit checks are inexpensive — typically £5 to £20 per report through providers such as Creditsafe or Experian — and give you the information to set appropriate terms and credit limits before you have committed to delivering work on extended payment terms. For a client who will represent 20 percent or more of your debtor book, a credit check is not optional.

Pinks helps UK SMEs close the gap between better payment terms and a fully structured working capital solution. Speak to us if operational improvements alone are not enough. This is how you negotiate better payment terms

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