Net 30 Payment Terms Explained: What They Mean and When to Use Them
"Net 30" is one of the most common payment terms you'll see on invoices — but what exactly does it mean, and is it the right choice for your business? This guide breaks down net payment terms, compares the most common options, and helps you decide which terms to put on your invoices.
What Does "Net 30" Mean?
Net 30 means the full invoice amount is due within 30 calendar days of the invoice date.
If you issue an invoice dated March 1 with Net 30 terms, the client is expected to pay by March 31. "Net" refers to the total amount due — no deductions, no discounts (unless separately specified).
Common Payment Terms Compared
| Term | Meaning | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Due on receipt | Payment expected immediately upon receiving the invoice | Small projects, new clients, one-off work |
| Net 7 | Due within 7 days | Small businesses, ongoing retainer work |
| Net 15 | Due within 15 days | Freelancers, small-to-medium projects |
| Net 30 | Due within 30 days | Standard business-to-business, most common default |
| Net 60 | Due within 60 days | Enterprise clients, government contracts |
| Net 90 | Due within 90 days | Large corporations (use cautiously) |
| 2/10 Net 30 | 2% discount if paid within 10 days; otherwise full amount due in 30 days | Incentivizing early payment |
When to Use Net 30
Net 30 is the industry default for B2B transactions and a safe starting point in most situations. Use it when:
- You're working with an established business that has a reliable payment history
- The client's accounts payable process requires time to cut checks or process transfers
- Your cash flow can handle waiting up to 30 days (realistically 30-45, since some clients pay late)
- You want to appear professional and flexible without being overly generous
When NOT to Use Net 30
Consider shorter terms when:
- You're working with a new client — until they've proven reliable, Net 15 or even "due on receipt" is reasonable. Trust is earned.
- The project is small — waiting 30 days to collect $200 isn't worth it. Use shorter terms for smaller invoices.
- Your cash flow is tight — if you need the money to pay your own bills, don't extend credit you can't afford. Shorter terms or upfront deposits are smart.
- The client has a history of late payments — shorten terms and consider requiring a deposit.
What About Early Payment Discounts?
Terms like "2/10 Net 30" mean: "Take a 2% discount if you pay within 10 days; otherwise, the full amount is due in 30 days."
This can be effective with larger clients who have the cash to pay early. For a $5,000 invoice, a 2% discount ($100) is meaningful to the client but gets you paid 20 days sooner.
Other common discount terms:
- 1/10 Net 30 — 1% discount if paid within 10 days
- 2/10 Net 60 — 2% discount if paid within 10 days of a 60-day window
How to Handle Late Payments
Even with clear terms, late payments happen. Protect yourself by:
- Stating late fees on the invoice — "A 1.5% monthly late fee applies to overdue balances" is standard and legal in most jurisdictions.
- Sending reminders before the due date — a friendly "your invoice is due in 3 days" email works wonders.
- Following up promptly — don't wait weeks after the due date. Send a reminder on day 1 past due.
- Having a contract — payment terms in a signed contract are much more enforceable than terms on an invoice alone.
For a full follow-up strategy, see our guide on how to invoice as a freelancer.
Tips for Choosing the Right Payment Terms
- Match the client's size — solo clients can often pay faster; large companies genuinely need processing time.
- Match the project size — larger projects warrant longer terms (or milestone payments). Smaller projects should have shorter terms.
- Negotiate, don't just accept — if a client insists on Net 60, negotiate a deposit or milestone payment to offset the wait.
- Be consistent — apply the same terms to similar clients and projects. Ad hoc terms create confusion.
- Put it in writing — always state payment terms on the invoice itself, even if they're in the contract.
How to Add Payment Terms to Your Invoice
With BillNeat's free invoice generator, set the due date field to reflect your terms (e.g., 30 days from the invoice date) and add any additional terms in the Notes section. The PDF will clearly show both the invoice date and due date.