Client Ghosting Your Invoice? The Exact Escalation Playbook That Works
You delivered the work. You sent the invoice. You sent the follow-up. Then… silence. No reply. No payment. No acknowledgement that you exist. If you're wondering what to do when a freelance client ignores your invoice, this is the escalation playbook that gets results — without burning bridges you might still need.
Let's name the feeling first, because it matters: being ghosted by a client who owes you money is uniquely horrible. It's not just the financial hit. It's the uncertainty — the checking of your inbox every forty minutes, the second-guessing ("Was the work not good enough? Did I say something wrong?"), the strange guilt you feel about chasing money you've already earned.
You're not being dramatic. Late payment charity the Federation of Small Businesses estimates that 50,000 UK businesses close each year because of cash flow issues caused by late payments. For freelancers working alone, one ghosted invoice can mean rent not getting paid.
So let's fix it. Below is the exact escalation playbook — four stages, from gentle to legal — with copy-paste templates for each. You'll also learn why clients go silent in the first place (the answer might surprise you), when it's genuinely time to walk away, and how to build future projects so ghosting becomes nearly impossible.
Why Clients Ghost (It's Not Always What You Think)
Before you fire off an angry email at 2am, it's worth understanding why clients go silent. Not to excuse it — there's no good excuse for not paying someone — but because knowing the reason changes your approach.
In my experience, client ghosting falls into five buckets:
- Cash flow panic. They can't pay right now and they're embarrassed about it. Rather than tell you the truth, they avoid you entirely. This is the most common reason by far, and it's the most solvable — because the money usually does come eventually, once you make it uncomfortable to keep ignoring you.
- Disorganisation. Your invoice landed in a cluttered inbox, got buried, and genuinely slipped through the cracks. Nobody in their team flagged it. They're not avoiding you — they've just forgotten you exist. Flattering? No. But easily fixed.
- Internal bureaucracy. Your direct contact may be willing to pay, but they're not the person who presses the button. Accounts payable is a different department with a different timeline and zero emotional investment in your relationship. Your contact might be chasing internally and simply not updating you.
- Unvoiced dissatisfaction. They weren't happy with the work (or the scope changed in their mind) but never told you. Instead of raising the issue like an adult, they've decided that silence is a negotiation tactic. This requires a different conversation entirely.
- Deliberate avoidance. Some clients — a small minority, but they exist — never intended to pay. They take the deliverables and disappear. This is the hardest to deal with emotionally, but it's also the scenario where legal escalation is most justified.
The reason this matters is simple: your tone should match the likely cause. You don't send a threatening letter to someone whose accounts department is just slow. And you don't send a fifth "just checking in!" to someone who's deliberately stiffing you.
The Right Mindset Before You Chase
Here are three principles that will make the entire process less painful:
1. You are not being rude. Asking to be paid for completed work is not pushy. It's not aggressive. It's the bare minimum expectation of any professional engagement. If a plumber fixed your boiler and sent an invoice, you wouldn't think they were "difficult" for following up. Give yourself the same grace.
2. Speed matters more than you think. Research consistently shows that the probability of collecting a debt drops dramatically with time. After 90 days, your chances of full recovery fall below 70%. After six months, below 50%. Every week you delay "to be polite" costs you money. Chase early, chase consistently.
3. Escalation is not confrontation. The ladder below is designed to give the client every reasonable opportunity to pay before things get formal. If they're decent and it was a genuine oversight, they'll respond at Stage 1 or 2 and be grateful you were professional about it. If they're not decent, you'll have a watertight paper trail when you need it.
The Friendly Nudge (Days 1–7)
The invoice was due. It hasn't been paid. It's been a few days. At this point, assume the best — it's probably just been missed. Your tone here is warm, brief, and completely free of tension.
The goal isn't to make them feel bad. It's to get the invoice back on their radar.
Hi [NAME],
Hope things are going well your end! Just a quick heads-up that invoice #[NUMBER] for £[AMOUNT] was due on [DATE] and I haven't seen it come through yet.
Totally understand if it's just been a busy week — I've re-attached it here so it's easy to find. Could you let me know when I can expect payment?
Cheers,
[YOUR NAME]
Send this 1–3 days after the due date. Re-attach the invoice as a PDF. Keep the subject line short and scannable — their inbox is full too.
If you don't hear back within 3–4 days, send one more email. Same tone, slightly more specific: "Just bumping this up — would be great to get a quick update on the payment timeline, even if it's just a rough date."
Two friendly emails, spaced a few days apart. That's Stage 1. If both go unanswered, it's time to switch channels.
The Channel Switch (Days 7–14)
Here's the thing about email: it's incredibly easy to ignore. Your message sits in a tab they haven't opened since Tuesday. They see the preview, feel a pang of guilt, and swipe it away to deal with "later." Later never comes.
Switching channels breaks the pattern. A text message or WhatsApp feels different — it's more personal, harder to bury, and it signals that you're genuinely paying attention and not just firing automated reminders into the void.
Hi [NAME] — hope you're well. Wanted to follow up on invoice #[NUMBER] (£[AMOUNT], due [DATE]). I've sent a couple of emails but appreciate things get busy! Could you give me a quick update on the payment timeline when you get a sec? Happy to jump on a call if easier. Thanks 🙂
A few tips for Stage 2:
- Use whatever channel you normally communicate on. If your working relationship was on Slack, message there. If you have their mobile number, text. If you're connected on LinkedIn, send a message. The point is to appear somewhere they're actually looking.
- Try calling. An actual phone call — even a quick voicemail — is remarkably effective. Many freelancers avoid it because it feels confrontational. It isn't. It's just direct. "Hi [NAME], it's [YOUR NAME]. Just calling about invoice [NUMBER] — I've sent a couple of emails and wanted to make sure everything's alright. Give me a ring when you get this."
- Contact the accounts team directly. If you can find an accounts payable email address or a different contact within the company, try reaching out. Your project contact may simply not be passing it on.
If you still get nothing after two weeks across multiple channels — email, text, call — then the silence is deliberate. Not necessarily malicious, but deliberate. It's time to shift your tone.
The Firm Formal Demand (Days 14–30)
This is where you stop being their mate and start being a creditor. The tone shifts from collaborative to businesslike. You're not angry — you're stating facts and consequences.
The key difference from earlier emails: you now reference your legal rights and set a specific deadline for payment.
Dear [NAME],
I am writing regarding the outstanding balance on invoice #[NUMBER] for £[AMOUNT], which was due on [DUE DATE] and is now [X] days overdue. I have made several attempts to reach you by email, phone, and message, and have not received a response.
I would like to resolve this matter without further escalation. However, I want to make you aware that under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, I am entitled to charge statutory interest at 8% above the Bank of England base rate, plus fixed compensation of £[40/70/100] for debt recovery costs.
I am requesting that payment of £[AMOUNT] is made in full within 7 days — by [DEADLINE DATE].
If there is a genuine issue with the invoice or the work delivered, I am open to discussing it. However, if I do not receive either payment or a substantive written response by [DEADLINE DATE], I will proceed with formal debt recovery, which may include a Letter Before Action and a County Court claim.
I trust this can be resolved promptly.
Regards,
[YOUR FULL NAME]
[YOUR BUSINESS NAME]
Use our late payment interest calculator to work out the exact statutory interest amount for your invoice. A few things this email does deliberately:
- It documents that you've tried multiple channels (useful if you end up in court)
- It mentions the Late Payment Act by name — this signals you know your rights and aren't guessing
- It sets a clear, specific deadline (not "as soon as possible" — a date)
- It leaves the door open for genuine disputes, which shows reasonableness
- It previews the next step (Letter Before Action) without being theatrical about it
For more detail on structuring formal demand letters and the full email sequence, see our guide on the 5-email sequence that gets overdue invoices paid.
Letter Before Action & Legal Steps (Day 30+)
If a month has passed and you've had nothing — no payment, no response, no acknowledgement — it's time for the final warning: a Letter Before Action (LBA). This is a formal legal document that tells the client you will issue court proceedings if they don't pay within 14 days.
You don't need a solicitor to send one. You just need to include the right elements:
- The exact amount owed, including any statutory interest and fixed compensation
- A clear description of how the debt arose
- A 14-day deadline for payment or a written response
- A statement that you will issue a County Court claim if the deadline passes
Send it by recorded delivery and email. Keep copies of everything. We have a complete walkthrough — including a full LBA template — in our UK freelancer's guide to non-paying clients.
If the LBA deadline passes with no response, you can file a claim through Money Claim Online (MCOL). For debts up to £10,000, it goes through the Small Claims Track — informal hearings, no solicitor needed, court fees starting from £35. The fees get added to the debt, so the client pays them if you win. And with a clear paper trail of emails, invoices, and an LBA? You almost certainly will.
For the complete legal process — statutory interest calculations, MCOL step-by-step, and enforcement options — see our full UK legal guide.
When to Cut Your Losses and Walk Away
Not every ghosted invoice is worth pursuing to the bitter end. Here's when it might be time to let go:
- The company has gone under. If they've entered administration or dissolved, you may be an unsecured creditor in a long queue. Check Companies House for their status.
- The amount is tiny relative to your time. Spending 15 hours chasing a £150 invoice doesn't make financial sense. A formal demand email (Stage 3) takes 10 minutes and often works — but if it doesn't, and the amount is small, your time may be better spent on billable work.
- You have no paper trail at all. No contract, no emails confirming the scope, no nothing. You can still pursue it, but your position is weaker. Consider whether the stress is worth it.
- It's destroying your mental health. This is a legitimate reason. If the pursuit of the debt is consuming you and affecting your ability to work on other projects, it might be healthier to write it off, learn the lessons below, and move forward. There's no shame in that.
Even when you decide to walk away, send a final notice. Something like: "I'm closing this matter. I want to note for the record that invoice #[NUMBER] for £[AMOUNT] remains unpaid." Occasionally, this prompts a surprise payment. And it closes the loop cleanly in your own mind.
How to Ghost-Proof Your Future Projects
The best escalation playbook is one you never have to use. Here's how to make ghosting nearly impossible going forward:
- Take a deposit — always. 25–50% upfront before any work begins. It proves commitment and ensures you're never 100% exposed. If a client balks at a deposit, that tells you something important.
- Milestone payments for larger projects. Break the work into phases with a payment due at each milestone. If they stop paying at Phase 2, you stop delivering at Phase 3. Simple.
- Written contracts with late payment clauses. Doesn't need to be a 30-page document. A clear scope, deliverables, payment amount, deadline, and a clause stating that late payment incurs statutory interest under the Late Payment Act. Need guidance? Read our post on how to add late fees to freelance invoices.
- Invoice immediately. The day you deliver, the invoice goes out. Every day you delay invoicing is a day you're giving the client permission to delay paying.
- Set up automated reminders. You shouldn't have to manually remember to chase every invoice. A system that sends reminders for you — on schedule, escalating in tone — removes the emotional burden entirely.
- Vet new clients. Check Companies House. Google them plus "reviews" or "freelancer experience." Ask around in your network. A 10-minute check before starting can save months of chasing afterwards.
- Document everything in writing. Every scope change, every approval, every "yes go ahead" — get it in an email. If things go wrong, your email trail is your evidence.
For a complete system of polite payment reminder emails you can deploy from day one, see our template library.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do when a freelance client ignores my invoice?
Follow a structured escalation: start with a friendly email reminder (days 1–3), switch channels to text or phone (days 7–14), send a formal demand citing your legal rights (days 14–30), and issue a Letter Before Action if there's still no response (day 30+). Most clients respond once the tone shifts from friendly to formal. The key is to act quickly — the longer you wait, the harder it gets.
Why do freelance clients ghost invoices?
The most common reasons are cash flow embarrassment (they can't pay and are avoiding the conversation), disorganisation (your invoice genuinely got lost), internal bureaucracy (your contact isn't the decision-maker), unvoiced dissatisfaction with the work, or deliberate avoidance. Understanding the likely reason helps you calibrate your approach.
How long should I wait before escalating an ignored invoice?
Send your first follow-up 1–3 days after the due date. If two friendly emails go unanswered, switch channels (text, phone, LinkedIn) by day 7–10. Escalate to a formal demand at day 14. Send a Letter Before Action at day 30. Don't wait months "to be polite" — recovery rates drop sharply after 90 days.
Should I text or WhatsApp a client about an unpaid invoice?
Absolutely. Switching channels is one of the most effective tactics when emails go unanswered. A short, professional text or WhatsApp message feels more personal and harder to ignore. Keep it brief, reference the invoice number, and ask for a quick update. Many freelancers find this gets a response within hours.
When should I write off an unpaid freelance invoice?
Consider writing it off when the client has gone insolvent, the amount is very small relative to the recovery effort, you have no documentation or paper trail, or the pursuit is seriously affecting your wellbeing. Even then, send one final notice — it occasionally prompts a surprise payment and gives you clean closure.
🛡️ Stop Chasing. Start Automating.
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Built for UK freelancers. Templates based on the exact playbook above.
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Written by the team at Landolio — tools and templates for UK freelancers who'd rather do great work than chase payments.
This guide provides general information and is not legal advice. For complex debt recovery situations, consider consulting a solicitor.