Payment terms and a simple credit policy shape the whole receivables process. For UK small businesses, sales, invoicing and follow-up should all be working from the same expectations about when and how customers pay.

What should be in place?

  • payment terms are clear to the customer
  • exceptions are approved deliberately
  • follow-up starts on a fixed timetable
  • customer risk is reviewed before it becomes a problem

Where do mistakes happen?

AreaTypical problem
Salesdeals are agreed without clear payment rules
Follow-upreminders are sent too late or too inconsistently
Riskone customer builds an exposure that no one challenges

A practical routine

  1. Make payment terms part of the standard invoicing process and tie them into Credit control routine .
  2. Use Aged receivables review to see which customers or terms create the biggest delays.
  3. Connect credit policy to Cash flow management , so debtor risk shows up in cash planning as well.
  4. Handle corrections and refunds consistently, so customers receive a clear message.

In summary

Payment terms only help when they are clearly communicated and consistently enforced. That is what turns credit policy into something practical.

For more on getting paid promptly, see our guides on setting payment terms on your invoices and dealing with late payers.