08. maí 2026
Understanding the EU Late Payment Directive: Your Rights as a Supplier
Late payments cost EU businesses billions annually. Know your legal rights and how to enforce payment terms effectively.
The Scale of the Late Payment Problem
Late payments remain the leading cause of SME insolvency in the European Union. According to the European Commission, 25% of all bankruptcies are caused by late payment from clients, particularly from larger companies paying smaller suppliers. The average payment delay across the EU is 13 days beyond agreed terms, representing billions in lost working capital for small businesses.
The EU Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU) and its 2025 revision provide powerful tools for suppliers, but many freelancers and SMEs are unaware of their rights or hesitant to exercise them.
Your Rights Under the Directive
The directive establishes that payment terms between businesses cannot exceed 60 days unless explicitly agreed otherwise and not grossly unfair to the creditor. For public authorities, the maximum is 30 days. If payment is late, you are automatically entitled to interest at the ECB reference rate plus 8 percentage points, without needing to send a reminder.
Additionally, you're entitled to a minimum fixed sum of 40 euros per late payment as compensation for recovery costs. This applies automatically by law. You don't need to have this in your contract, though including it reinforces awareness.
Practical Enforcement Strategies
Prevention is better than enforcement. Set clear payment terms on every invoice, send automated reminders before and on the due date, and follow up systematically. Many late payments are caused by disorganization rather than bad faith. Making it easy for clients to pay on time reduces the problem significantly.
When prevention fails, escalate professionally. A first reminder on day 1 after the due date. A second reminder on day 7 noting that statutory interest applies. A formal notice on day 14 stating the specific interest amount accruing daily. Most businesses pay at this stage.
Building Payment Discipline Into Your Systems
Offer early payment incentives: a 2% discount for payment within 7 days can be more cost-effective than chasing late payments. Require deposits or milestone payments for larger projects to reduce your exposure. Track payment patterns in your financial dashboard to identify chronically late clients before overexposure becomes a problem.
Consider factoring or invoice financing for persistent late payers. Modern fintech solutions offer advances on outstanding invoices at reasonable rates, converting your accounts receivable into predictable cash flow without damaging client relationships.
Get paid on time, every time
Arbeitly's invoicing with automated reminders helps you enforce payment terms without awkward conversations. Set up automated invoicing.
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