Our invoices state "Interest on Past Due accounts will be charged at the rate of 2% per month (24% per annum)." I only ever charge interest for seriously past due accounts.
My understanding is that in order to be able to charge interest, it must be stated on your invoices that interest charges will apply and at what rate. Otherwise you can't charge interest. Someone can correct me if that's wrong.
-
Nov 11th, 2008 07:10 AM #1Newbie
- Join Date
- Oct 3rd, 2008
- Location
- Edmonton, AB
- Posts
- 17
Late Fees
We do drafting work for companies and send them the invoice after the project is complete. We give 30 days after sending the invoice to receive payment. Is there a standard for late fees? 10 percent of the unpaid portion of the invoice for every 2 weeks overdue, 15 percent every month, etc?
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked graemew for this post.
-
Sponsored Links - Join the RedFlagDeals.com community and remove this ad.
-
Nov 11th, 2008 07:53 AM #2
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked Stv23658 for this post.
-
Nov 11th, 2008 10:38 AM #3Deal Addict




- Join Date
- Sep 23rd, 2007
- Location
- Newfoundland
- Posts
- 4,317
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked spf1971 for this post.
-
Nov 20th, 2008 05:31 AM #4Newbie
[OP]
- Join Date
- Oct 3rd, 2008
- Location
- Edmonton, AB
- Posts
- 17
Thank you for the replies, those are very helpful.
How exactly do you let the overdue client know that you are going to tack on this extra charge if it comes to that? Do you send him a new invoice with the additional late fee? Or is it common to inform him with a letter on my business's letterhead?
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked graemew for this post.
-
Nov 20th, 2008 05:38 AM #5Newbie
[OP]
- Join Date
- Oct 3rd, 2008
- Location
- Edmonton, AB
- Posts
- 17
Also, if you compound monthly, it looks like 1.05^12 it comes to 1.7958, while 1.04^12 comes to comes to 1.6010, so does that not mean that it should be just under 4%?
Or do you only add the interest onto the base fee? Where 60/12=5%.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked graemew for this post.
-
Nov 20th, 2008 06:47 AM #6
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked matdwyer for this post.
-
Nov 20th, 2008 07:31 PM #7Deal Addict




- Join Date
- Sep 23rd, 2007
- Location
- Newfoundland
- Posts
- 4,317
You can't charge late fees unless you had disclosed this to them in advance. You can say that effective today any late fee will be charged an extra fee, but you can't charge anything for outstanding debt.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked spf1971 for this post.
-
Nov 21st, 2008 04:36 AM #8Newbie
[OP]
- Join Date
- Oct 3rd, 2008
- Location
- Edmonton, AB
- Posts
- 17
We haven't sent out any invoices yet so I don't have a current situation to worry about. Actually, we're not even a company yet. I am making our template invoices now and this got me thinking about late fees.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked graemew for this post.
Search Forums

