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How to Write Payment Terms That Protect Creatives

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How to Write Payment Terms That Protect Creatives

Payment terms set expectations and protect you. They tell clients:

  • When payment is due
  • How to pay
  • What happens if payment is late

Clear payment terms prevent confusion, reduce payment delays, and protect you from non-payment.

This guide shows you how to write payment terms that work.

πŸ“– Part of our invoicing guide series: Payment terms are Step 2 in the invoicing process. For the complete guide, see How to Invoice as a Designer or Creator.


What Are Payment Terms?

Payment terms are the conditions under which you'll accept payment. They include:

  • Due date β€” When payment is expected
  • Payment methods β€” How clients can pay
  • Deposit requirements β€” If upfront payment is required
  • Late fees β€” Penalties for late payment
  • Payment link β€” How to pay online

Clear terms = fewer problems.


Essential Payment Terms to Include

1. Due Date

What it is: The date by which payment is expected

How to write it:

  • "Payment due within 14 days of invoice date"
  • "Payment due: March 21, 2026"
  • "Net 14" (payment due 14 days after invoice date)

Common terms:

  • Net 7 β€” Payment due within 7 days
  • Net 14 β€” Payment due within 14 days (most common)
  • Net 30 β€” Payment due within 30 days
  • Due on receipt β€” Payment due immediately

Be specific. Don't say "payment due soon" β€” give a date.

2. Payment Methods

What it is: How clients can pay

How to write it:

Payment Methods:
- Credit/debit card via payment link: [link]
- Bank transfer: [account details]
- Check: [mailing address]

Offer multiple options but make card payment easiest.

3. Deposit Requirements

What it is: Upfront payment before work starts

How to write it:

Payment Terms:
- 50% deposit ($1,200) due upon project start
- 50% balance ($1,200) due upon final delivery

Common deposits:

  • 30% β€” Smaller projects
  • 50% β€” Standard for most projects
  • 100% upfront β€” Small projects or new clients

Always charge deposits for larger projects. Protects you from non-payment.

4. Late Fees (Optional)

What it is: Penalty for late payment

How to write it:

Late Payment Policy:
- Payments overdue by more than 7 days subject to 5% monthly interest
- Late fees will be added to outstanding balance

Common late fees:

  • 5% monthly interest
  • $50 flat fee
  • 1.5% per month

Include late fees to encourage timely payment. But be reasonable.

5. Payment Link

What it is: Link to pay online (if using Stripe or similar)

How to write it:

Payment can be made instantly via card: [payment link]

Make payment easy. Include link prominently.


Complete Payment Terms Examples

Example 1: Simple Project (Net 14)

Payment Terms:
- Payment due within 14 days of invoice date
- Payment via card: [payment link]
- Or bank transfer: [account details]
- Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest

Good for: Standard projects, established clients.

Example 2: Deposit + Final Payment

Payment Terms:
- 50% deposit ($1,200) due upon project start
- 50% balance ($1,200) due upon final delivery
- Payment via card: [payment link]
- Or bank transfer: [account details]
- Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest

Good for: Larger projects, new clients, custom work.

Example 3: Due on Receipt

Payment Terms:
- Payment due upon receipt of invoice
- Payment via card: [payment link]
- Or bank transfer: [account details]

Good for: Small projects, one-off work, quick turnaround.

Example 4: Net 30 (Longer Terms)

Payment Terms:
- Payment due within 30 days of invoice date (Net 30)
- Payment via card: [payment link]
- Or bank transfer: [account details]
- Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest

Good for: Established clients, larger invoices, corporate clients.


How to Write Clear Payment Terms

1. Be specific

Bad: "Payment due soon"
Good: "Payment due: March 21, 2026"

Bad: "Pay via link"
Good: "Payment via card: [payment link]"

Specific terms prevent confusion.

2. Use plain language

Bad: "Payment shall be remitted within fourteen (14) calendar days"
Good: "Payment due within 14 days"

Plain language is clearer.

3. Make payment easy

Include:

  • Payment link (prominently)
  • Multiple payment methods
  • Clear instructions

The easier it is to pay, the faster you get paid.

4. Set expectations

Explain:

  • When payment is due
  • How to pay
  • What happens if late

Set expectations upfront.

5. Be professional but friendly

Tone:

  • Professional (not casual)
  • Friendly (not aggressive)
  • Clear (not vague)

Balance professionalism with approachability.


Where to Put Payment Terms

On the invoice:

Best location: Bottom of invoice, in "Payment Terms" section

Example:

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Payment Terms:
- Payment due within 14 days of invoice date
- Payment via card: [payment link]
- Or bank transfer: [account details]
- Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest

━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

Make it visible. Don't hide terms in fine print.

In the email:

Include in invoice email:

Payment Terms:
- Total: $2,400
- Due: March 21, 2026
- Pay via card: [payment link]

Reinforce terms in email.

In the contract:

Include in project contract/agreement:

  • Payment schedule
  • Due dates
  • Late fee policy

Set expectations before work starts.


Common Payment Terms Mistakes

1. Vague due dates

Bad: "Payment due soon"
Good: "Payment due: March 21, 2026"

Be specific.

2. Missing payment methods

Bad: No payment methods listed
Good: "Payment via card: [link] or bank transfer: [details]"

Tell clients how to pay.

3. No late fee policy

Bad: No mention of late fees
Good: "Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest"

Include late fees to encourage timely payment.

4. Hidden payment link

Bad: Payment link buried in email
Good: Payment link prominent in invoice and email

Make payment easy.

5. Unclear deposit terms

Bad: "50% upfront"
Good: "50% deposit ($1,200) due upon project start"

Be specific about amounts and timing.

6. Too aggressive tone

Bad: "Payment is REQUIRED immediately or legal action will be taken"
Good: "Payment due within 14 days. Late payments subject to 5% monthly interest."

Be firm but professional.


Handling Payment Disputes

If client questions terms:

  1. Refer to contract (if you have one)
  2. Explain terms clearly
  3. Be flexible if needed (within reason)
  4. Stand firm if terms are fair

Most clients accept standard terms.

If client wants to change terms:

Consider:

  • Is request reasonable?
  • Is client established/trusted?
  • Can you accommodate?

Be flexible with good clients, firm with problematic ones.

If payment is late:

  1. Send friendly reminder (after due date)
  2. Wait a few days
  3. Follow up again (if still unpaid)
  4. Apply late fees (if specified in terms)
  5. Consider pausing work (if ongoing project)

Most late payments are just forgotten. A reminder usually works.


FAQs

What's a standard payment term?

Net 14 (payment due within 14 days) is most common for freelancers. Net 30 is common for larger/corporate clients.

Should I charge deposits?

Yes, for larger projects. 30-50% deposit is standard. Protects you from non-payment.

How much should late fees be?

5% monthly interest is common and reasonable. Don't make it punitive β€” just enough to encourage timely payment.

Can I change payment terms after sending invoice?

Technically yes, but:

  • Get client agreement
  • Send updated invoice
  • Explain the change

Better to set terms correctly from the start.

What if client wants different terms?

Consider:

  • Is request reasonable?
  • Is client established?
  • Can you accommodate?

Be flexible with good clients, but don't compromise too much.

Should I include payment terms in contract?

Yes. Set expectations before work starts. Include:

  • Payment schedule
  • Due dates
  • Late fee policy

Prevents disputes later.


FAQs

What payment terms should I use for design work?

Common terms:

  • Net 15 (15 days) β€” Standard for most projects
  • Net 30 (30 days) β€” For established clients
  • Due on receipt β€” For small projects or deposits
  • 50% upfront, 50% on completion β€” For larger projects

Choose based on: Project size, client relationship, your cash flow needs.

Should I charge late fees?

Yes, if you want to encourage timely payment. Include in terms:

  • Late fee amount (e.g., 1.5% per month)
  • When it applies (e.g., 7 days after due date)
  • How it's calculated

Be consistent β€” apply to all clients or none.

What payment methods should I accept?

Most common:

  • Credit/debit cards (via Stripe) β€” Fastest, most convenient
  • Bank transfers β€” Lower fees, slower
  • PayPal β€” Less common now, but some clients prefer it

Best practice: Accept multiple methods to make payment easy.

How do I handle partial payments?

Options:

  • Use deposit invoices (50% upfront, 50% later)
  • Accept partial payment and update remaining balance
  • Create separate invoices for milestones

Clear terms prevent confusion.

What if a client wants different payment terms?

Consider:

  • Is it a one-time request or ongoing?
  • Is the client established and trustworthy?
  • Can you accommodate without cash flow issues?

Be flexible with good clients, but don't compromise too much.


Ready to write clear payment terms? Try inv.so free β€” payment terms included automatically.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's a standard payment term?

**Net 14** (payment due within 14 days) is most common for freelancers. Net 30 is common for larger/corporate clients.

Should I charge deposits?

**Yes, for larger projects.** 30-50% deposit is standard. Protects you from non-payment.

How much should late fees be?

**5% monthly interest** is common and reasonable. Don't make it punitive β€” just enough to encourage timely payment.

Can I change payment terms after sending invoice?

Get client agreement Send updated invoice Explain the change **Better to set terms correctly from the start.**

What if client wants different terms?

Is request reasonable? Is client established? Can you accommodate? **Be flexible with good clients, but don't compromise too much.**

Should I include payment terms in contract?

**Yes.** Set expectations before work starts. Include: Payment schedule Due dates Late fee policy **Prevents disputes later.** ---