Late payments are not just an inconvenience — they are a genuine threat to business survival. According to industry surveys, more than 50% of invoices issued by small businesses are paid late, and roughly one in ten are never paid at all. Cash flow problems caused by late payments force thousands of otherwise profitable businesses to close their doors every year. For practical strategies on recovering overdue payments, see our guide on how to handle late payments.
The good news is that governments around the world have enacted legislation to protect creditors and penalize chronic late payers. Understanding these laws gives you powerful tools to recover what you are owed and to structure your invoicing in ways that discourage late payment in the first place.
The UK has some of the strongest late payment protections in the world. The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, along with subsequent amendments implementing the EU Late Payment Directive, gives every business an automatic right to charge interest and claim compensation on overdue invoices.
Under the Act, you can charge statutory interest at a rate of 8% above the Bank of England base rate. As of early 2026, with the base rate at 4.5%, this means you can charge 12.5% annual interest on overdue invoices. This interest accrues from the day after the payment due date.
In addition to interest, you are entitled to a fixed compensation amount based on the invoice value:
| Invoice Amount | Fixed Compensation |
|---|---|
| Up to £999.99 | £40 |
| £1,000 – £9,999.99 | £70 |
| £10,000 and above | £100 |
These rights apply automatically to all B2B transactions and cannot be waived by contract. Any contractual term that attempts to exclude or limit these rights is void if it is not fair and reasonable.
India's Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development Act, 2006 (MSMED Act) provides significant protection to registered MSMEs against late payment by buyers. If your business is registered as an MSME on the Udyam portal, you have access to powerful enforcement mechanisms.
Under Section 15 of the MSMED Act, buyers must pay MSME suppliers within the time agreed in writing, which cannot exceed 45 days from the date of acceptance of goods or services. If no written agreement exists, payment must be made within 15 days.
Section 16 mandates that buyers who fail to pay within the stipulated period must pay compound interest at three times the bank rate notified by the Reserve Bank of India. With the current bank rate, this translates to an annual interest rate of approximately 19.5%, compounded monthly. This is a substantial penalty designed to strongly discourage delayed payment.
Every state in India is required to establish an MSME Facilitation Council to hear disputes related to delayed payments. These councils must resolve cases within 90 days and can issue binding orders. Filing with the Council is significantly cheaper and faster than going through civil courts.
Unlike the UK and India, the United States does not have a single comprehensive federal law governing late payments in private commercial transactions. Instead, protections come from a patchwork of federal and state laws.
The Prompt Payment Act of 1982 applies to payments made by the federal government to contractors and vendors. Under this law, federal agencies must pay invoices within 30 days of receiving a proper invoice. If they fail to do so, they must automatically pay interest at a rate determined by the Treasury Department, currently around 5% per annum. Most federal prime contractors are also required to pay their subcontractors within 7 days of receiving payment from the government.
Many states have their own prompt payment laws, though coverage and strength vary widely. Some key examples include:
The EU Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU) sets minimum standards across all EU member states. While individual countries may offer stronger protections, no EU member can fall below the Directive's baseline.
Individual member states have implemented the Directive with varying degrees of additional protection. Germany, for instance, has particularly strong enforcement, while southern European countries have historically had longer average payment times despite the Directive.
Knowing the law is one thing; enforcing it effectively is another. The best approach follows a structured escalation path that gives the debtor every opportunity to pay before you incur legal costs.
Send a polite email reminding the client that the invoice is overdue. Attach a copy of the original invoice. Many late payments are genuinely due to oversight, and a simple reminder resolves the majority of cases.
Send a formal written notice stating the outstanding amount, the applicable interest and compensation under law, and a deadline to pay (typically 7 days). Reference the specific legislation that entitles you to interest. This often prompts immediate action.
Issue a formal "letter before action" (known as a demand letter in the US). This letter explicitly states that you will pursue legal action if payment is not received within 14 days. In the UK and many EU countries, courts expect to see evidence that you sent such a letter before they will hear your case.
If direct communication has failed, engaging a collections agency is often more cost-effective than immediate legal action. Reputable agencies typically charge between 15% and 30% of the recovered amount, with no fee if they fail to collect. The mere involvement of a collections agency often triggers payment, as businesses want to avoid damage to their credit rating.
For amounts within the small claims limit (which varies by jurisdiction — for example, up to $12,500 in California, up to £10,000 in England and Wales), small claims court offers a relatively quick and inexpensive way to obtain a judgment. Filing fees are modest, lawyers are generally not required, and hearings are informal. For larger amounts, you may need to engage a solicitor or attorney, but many work on a contingency or no-win-no-fee basis for debt recovery.
Legal remedies are important, but the best strategy is to prevent late payments from occurring in the first place. The following practices significantly reduce the risk of overdue invoices:
Our free invoice generator includes built-in payment terms, due dates, and late fee disclosures to help you get paid on time, every time.
Create Free InvoiceCan I charge late payment interest even if my contract does not mention it?
In many jurisdictions, yes. In the UK, statutory interest under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts Act applies automatically to all B2B transactions. In the EU, the Late Payment Directive provides similar automatic rights. In India, the MSMED Act provides automatic interest for registered MSMEs. In the US, however, your ability to charge interest generally depends on your contract terms or state law.
What is the difference between statutory interest and contractual interest?
Statutory interest is set by law and applies automatically, while contractual interest is the rate you agree upon with your client in your contract. If your contractual rate is lower than the statutory rate, you may be able to claim the statutory rate instead, depending on your jurisdiction. In the UK, a contractual term that provides less than the statutory remedy may be challenged as unfair.
How much does it cost to take a client to small claims court?
Costs vary by jurisdiction. In England and Wales, filing fees range from £35 to £455 depending on the claim amount. In the US, small claims filing fees typically range from $30 to $200 depending on the state and amount claimed. In India, filing with an MSME Facilitation Council requires no fee in most states. These costs are generally recoverable if you win the case.
Should I use a collections agency or go straight to court?
A collections agency is often the better first step. They handle all communication, their involvement signals seriousness without the cost of legal proceedings, and they can report unpaid debts to credit bureaus. Court should be reserved for cases where the debtor disputes the debt or refuses to engage with collections efforts.
Does the MSMED Act apply to all businesses in India?
No. The protections under the MSMED Act apply only to suppliers who are registered as Micro, Small, or Medium Enterprises on the Udyam portal. The buyer can be of any size. If you are not registered, you would need to pursue payment through standard contract law and civil courts.
What happens if a client disputes the invoice to avoid paying?
If the dispute is genuine, address it promptly and issue a corrected invoice if needed. If the dispute is being used as a delay tactic, document everything and proceed with your escalation path. Our guide on handling disputed invoices covers this process in detail. Courts and facilitation councils are experienced at recognizing bad-faith disputes, and raising a frivolous dispute does not protect a debtor from interest and compensation obligations.