Most businesses send invoice reminders. Most of those reminders do not work. The problem is not that clients ignore reminders — it is that the reminders themselves are built wrong.

A bad reminder is vague, impersonal, and easy to dismiss. A good reminder is specific, timely, and makes paying the easiest action on the table. This guide covers exactly how to write reminders that trigger payments — not just polite acknowledgments.

The 4 Laws of Effective Invoice Reminders

1. Send the First Reminder Before the Due Date

The most effective collection touch is not the first overdue notice — it is the pre-due reminder. Sending a "just a heads up, Invoice #123 is due Friday" 3–5 days before the due date catches invoices before they go overdue.

Clients who receive pre-due reminders pay an average of 5 days earlier. This single change — sending reminders before the due date instead of after — is responsible for the majority of DSO improvement in businesses that implement it.

2. Be Specific, Not Polite

"Just following up on the invoice" is easy to ignore because it creates no urgency. "Invoice #123 for $2,850 was due on March 8 — please let us know your expected payment date" is specific enough to require a response. Specificity is a forcing function.

3. Make Paying the Easiest Option

Every reminder should include a payment link. Not "please remit payment to our office" — an actual one-click link to a payment page. When paying takes three seconds, clients pay. When it requires finding a checkbook or logging into a portal they barely remember, they wait.

4. Escalate on Schedule, Every Time

The reason most SMB collection sequences fail is inconsistency. You send the first reminder religiously. The second one gets forgotten in a busy week. The third one never gets sent. Clients learn this quickly — and adjust their payment timing accordingly.

Automated reminders run on schedule regardless of your workload. This is the structural advantage of AR automation: every invoice gets the same sequence, every time, without exception.

The reminder sequence below recovers the majority of overdue invoices without escalating to collections. It works because it combines the right timing with the right tone at every stage.

The Reminder Sequence That Actually Works

A five-stage cadence that covers every invoice from pre-due to final notice:

6 Ready-to-Use Email Templates

Template 1: Pre-Due Reminder (3 Days Before)

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Subject: Invoice #123 due Friday — heads up Hi [First Name], Hope you are well. Just a quick heads up that Invoice #123 for $[amount] is due this Friday ([date]). If you have any questions about the invoice, let me know — happy to walk through it. Payment link: [link] Thanks, [Your name]

Template 2: Due Date Notice (Day 0)

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Subject: Invoice #123 is due today — quick payment link Hi [First Name], This is a reminder that Invoice #123 for $[amount] is due today ([date]). You can pay directly here: [payment link]. If you have already sent payment, thank you — feel free to ignore this. Otherwise, please let us know if you have any questions. Best, [Your name]

Template 3: First Overdue Notice (3 Days Late)

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Subject: Invoice #123 — past due as of [date] Hi [First Name], I hope you are well. Our records show that Invoice #123 for $[amount], originally due on [due date], is now 3 days overdue. Please take a moment to process payment at your earliest convenience: [payment link]. If there is anything we can help clarify — a discrepancy, a question about the work, anything at all — please reply to this email. We would rather resolve it quickly than let it sit. Thank you, [Your name]

Template 4: Second Notice With Late Fee Mention (10 Days Late)

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Subject: Reminder: Invoice #123 is now 10 days past due Hi [First Name], Invoice #123 for $[amount] is now 10 days overdue. At this point, I want to make sure nothing has slipped through — invoices can get lost in processing, and I would rather reach out than let this sit any longer. Please confirm your expected payment date so we can keep our records accurate: [payment link]. Please note: per our payment terms, a late fee of [X%] applies to invoices unpaid after 30 days. We want to avoid that — let us know how we can help. Thank you, [Your name]

Template 5: Final Notice Before Escalation (21 Days Late)

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Subject: Final notice — Invoice #123, 21 days overdue Hi [First Name], Invoice #123 for $[amount] has now been outstanding for 21 days. I have reached out a few times and have not heard back, so I want to make sure this has not fallen through the cracks. Is there a payment issue — a dispute, a processing problem, or a cash flow timing challenge on your end? Please let me know. We can work through almost anything. But I need to hear from you. Please contact us within 3 business days to arrange payment. If we do not hear from you, we will need to escalate this according to our standard collections process. [payment link] [Your name] | [Phone number]

Template 6: Friendly Check-In (30+ Days Overdue)

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Subject: Quick question about Invoice #123 Hi [First Name], I wanted to reach out personally about Invoice #123 — it has been outstanding for over 30 days now, and I want to check in before this goes any further. Is there anything going on with this invoice I should know about? If the timing is tight, we can discuss a payment plan. If there is a dispute, I would rather resolve it now than let it sit. Please give me a call at [phone] or reply to this email so we can close this out. Thanks, [Your name]

Automate your entire reminder sequence

ARMed runs this sequence for you: pre-due reminders, day-of notices, and escalating follow-ups that hit every overdue invoice on schedule. Most users see payment times improve by 10–15 days within the first month.

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The Part Most Businesses Skip: Automation

If you are managing this sequence manually across more than 10–15 clients, it will fall apart. Not because your team does not care — because there are only so many hours in a week, and invoice reminders always lose priority to work that feels more urgent.

AR automation handles this entire sequence for every invoice, automatically. You set the cadence once, connect your accounting software, and every invoice gets the right reminder at the right time — whether you are at your desk or on a job site.

The key difference between manual and automated follow-up is not the quality of the emails. It is the consistency. Manual sequences have a 100% dropout rate after the second reminder. Automated sequences have a 0% dropout rate. That gap is where the money lives.