Unpaid Invoice Recovery

Recover unpaid invoices quickly, professionally and with the right legal pressure.

Unpaid invoices can damage your cash flow, interrupt your business and leave you spending valuable time chasing a customer who should already have paid. Whether you are a small business, freelancer, contractor, supplier, agency or service provider, Zain Legal & Co can help you take a structured and proportionate approach to recovering what you are owed.

We assist with unpaid invoice recovery, business debt recovery, letters before action, late payment interest calculations, payment plan negotiations, County Court money claim support and post-judgment enforcement options where payment is still not made.

Help Recovering an Unpaid Invoice

When an invoice remains unpaid, the problem is rarely just the invoice itself. The debtor may be ignoring your emails, delaying payment, raising a last-minute complaint, disputing the work, or promising payment without actually paying. The longer the debt remains outstanding, the more difficult it can become to recover the money.

Our unpaid invoice recovery support is designed to help you move from informal chasing to a clear recovery strategy. We review the paperwork, identify the legal basis of the debt, prepare a strong payment demand, and help you decide whether negotiation, settlement, a payment plan, a County Court money claim or enforcement action is the most sensible next step.

Just call us. We can answer all your questions

Contact with us

0121 817 0033

Who This Service Is For

This service is suitable for businesses and individuals trading in a commercial context who are owed money for goods, services or completed work.

  • Small businesses owed money by customers or other businesses
  • Freelancers and consultants chasing unpaid fees
  • Contractors and tradespeople with unpaid invoices
  • Suppliers waiting for payment after delivering goods
  • Agencies owed fees for marketing, recruitment, design, care, property or professional services
  • Landlords, managing agents or service providers owed commercial sums
  • Businesses that have received excuses, delay tactics or disputed invoice responses
  • Businesses that already have a County Court Judgment but have still not been paid

What We Can Help With

Zain Legal & Co can help you with the practical and legal stages of unpaid invoice recovery, including:

  • Reviewing your invoice, contract, emails, purchase order, delivery records and payment terms
  • Assessing whether the debt is admitted, disputed or partly disputed
  • Preparing a formal payment demand or letter before action
  • Calculating late payment interest and fixed debt recovery costs where applicable
  • Responding to excuses such as “the work was not agreed”, “the work was defective”, “the invoice is wrong”, or “we are waiting for our client to pay us”
  • Negotiating payment plans, settlement terms or admissions of debt
  • Supporting County Court money claim preparation where court action is required
  • Helping with documents after a defence is filed, including witness evidence and hearing preparation
  • Advising on enforcement options after judgment, including warrants of control, High Court enforcement, third-party debt orders, charging orders and other suitable routes

Our Unpaid Invoice Recovery Process

In many business-to-business debts, you may be able to claim statutory late payment interest and fixed recovery costs if another business is late paying for goods or services. This can increase the amount owed and can also apply pressure because the debtor can see that delay is making the debt more expensive.

The amount you can claim will depend on the contract, the payment terms, the type of debtor, the invoice value and whether the debt qualifies under late payment legislation. If there is a contractual interest clause, that clause may affect whether statutory interest is available.

We can review the position and help calculate the debt, interest, recovery costs and the evidence needed to support your claim.

Our Unpaid Invoice Recovery Process

StepWhat happensWhy it matters
1Review the invoice and paperworkWe check the invoice, contract, purchase order, emails, delivery notes, payment terms and any dispute raised by the debtor.
2Send a focused payment demandWe prepare a clear payment demand or letter before action setting out the debt, the evidence, the legal basis and the deadline for payment.
3Calculate interest and recovery costsWhere appropriate, we calculate late payment interest and fixed compensation so the debtor understands the true value of the claim.
4Negotiate payment or settlementIf the debtor engages, we can help negotiate payment, instalments, admissions of debt and settlement terms that protect your position.
5Prepare the next stepIf payment is still refused, we can assist with the next practical step, including small claim paperwork, response to a defence, or judgment enforcement options.

The Tribunal Issues People Search About Most

Debtors often delay payment by raising issues late. We help you separate genuine disputes from delay tactics and build a response around the evidence.

  • “We never agreed to that price.”
  • “The work was not completed.”
  • “The service was poor.”
  • “The invoice was sent to the wrong person.”
  • “We are waiting for our own customer to pay us.”
  • “The director who approved this has left.”
  • “We need more time.”
  • “We did not receive the invoice.”

A strong unpaid invoice recovery strategy should identify the contract, the work completed, the payment date, the invoice history, the debtor’s response, and why the debt remains payable.

Letter Before Action for an Unpaid Invoice

A letter before action is often the most effective first formal step. It tells the debtor that the matter has moved beyond ordinary chasing and gives them a final opportunity to pay before further action is considered.

A well-drafted letter before action should usually set out:

  • who owes the money and why
  • the invoice number, invoice date and amount outstanding
  • the goods or services supplied
  • the payment terms and date the payment became overdue
  • any interest and debt recovery costs being claimed
  • the deadline for payment or response
  • the next steps if the debtor ignores the letter

We can prepare a focused letter before action that is firm, clear and proportionate, while also protecting your position if the matter later reaches court.

County Court Money Claims and CCJ Enforcement

If the debtor still refuses to pay, you may need to consider a County Court money claim. This should not be rushed. A claim needs a clear cause of action, proper evidence, a correct calculation of the debt, and a sensible strategy for what happens if the debtor files a defence.

If you already have a County Court Judgment and the debtor has still not paid, enforcement may be necessary. Depending on the facts, options may include a warrant of control, High Court enforcement, a third-party debt order, a charging order, or an order requiring the debtor or company officer to provide information about their finances.

We can help you understand which option is proportionate, what documents are needed and what risks should be considered before taking the next step.

Why Choose Zain Legal & Co for Unpaid Invoice Recovery?

  • Practical, plain-English advice focused on recovery and cash flow
  • Support with both simple unpaid invoices and disputed invoice claims
  • Clear letters before action that explain the legal and commercial pressure points
  • Help calculating interest, fixed recovery costs and the total sum claimed
  • Small business-friendly support without unnecessary complexity
  • Assistance with negotiation, payment plans and next-step court paperwork where appropriate
  • Experience supporting clients with business debt recovery, small claims and enforcement issues

Our aim is to help you recover the money in the most sensible way: quickly where possible, firmly where necessary, and with the right paperwork in place if the matter becomes contested.

Documents to Prepare Before Your Consultation

To make your consultation more effective, prepare as many of the following documents as possible:

  • the unpaid invoice or statement of account
  • the contract, quotation, purchase order or terms and conditions
  • emails, WhatsApp messages or letters showing agreement and payment chasing
  • proof of delivery, completion, attendance, timesheets, job sheets or photographs
  • any complaint, dispute or refusal to pay from the debtor
  • details of any part-payments made
  • the debtor’s full legal name, trading name, company number and address

Frequently asked questions

Start by checking the invoice, contract, payment terms and proof that the goods or services were supplied. If informal chasing has failed, the next step is usually a formal payment demand or letter before action. If payment is still not made, a County Court money claim or enforcement route may be considered depending on the facts.
In many business-to-business debts, statutory late payment interest may be available if the debt qualifies and there is no contractual interest term that changes the position. The correct calculation depends on the invoice, payment date, contract terms and the type of debtor.
A letter before action is a formal letter that gives the debtor a final opportunity to pay or respond before court action is considered. It should identify the debt, evidence, payment deadline, interest, costs and the consequences of ignoring the letter.
A disputed invoice needs careful handling. You should identify exactly what is disputed, whether the dispute was raised at the time, and what evidence proves the work was agreed, completed or accepted. A strong response can often narrow the dispute or put pressure on the debtor to settle.
You may be able to bring a County Court money claim if the debt is properly evidenced and payment is overdue. The correct route depends on the amount claimed, the parties, the evidence and whether the debtor is likely to defend the claim.
Costs recovery depends on the court track, contract terms and the conduct of the parties. In small claims, recoverable legal costs are usually limited, but court fees, interest and fixed sums may be relevant depending on the claim.
A judgment does not automatically guarantee payment. If the debtor does not pay after judgment, you may need to consider enforcement options such as a warrant of control, High Court enforcement, third-party debt order, charging order or an order to obtain financial information.
No adviser can guarantee recovery because the outcome depends on the evidence, the debtor’s financial position, whether the debt is disputed and whether enforcement is worthwhile. We focus on giving you a clear, practical strategy and strong paperwork to improve your position.

Documents to Prepare Before Your Consultation

If your invoice has not been paid and ordinary chasing is not working, book a consultation with Zain Legal & Co. We can review the papers, explain your recovery options and help you decide the next practical step.

Book your consultation here: