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Late Fee Calculator

Work out exactly what to charge a client when they miss a due date — with monthly, annual, daily, or flat fees, plus a grace period and a copy-ready invoice line.

Monthly, annual, daily, or flat fees Grace period built in Copy-ready invoice line
Fee type

Result

Days overdue
30
Late fee
$15.00
Total amount due
$1,015.00
Preview:

Late payment fee (1.5% per month, 30 days overdue): $15.00.

This calculator is for guidance only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Late fee limits vary by state, country, and contract — confirm your applicable rate and disclose it in your contract before invoicing.

What you get out of this calculator

Most freelancers freeze when an invoice goes overdue. This tool removes the guesswork so you can send the next message today, with a number you can defend.

5–8 days

Faster payment

Invoices that clearly state a late fee policy get paid 5–8 days faster on average — even when the fee is never applied.

1.5% / mo

Industry-standard rate

Most US freelancers and small businesses use 1.5% per month (18% APR). The calculator defaults to it, but you can change it.

30 sec

From overdue to invoice line

Enter the amount, dates, and rate. Copy the line straight into your invoice or follow-up email.

Why guessing your late fee almost always backfires

If you've ever stared at an overdue invoice and thought "how much can I actually charge?", you've already lost time. Here's what usually goes wrong.

  • You undercharge to keep the peace. A vague "plus interest" line gets ignored. Without a real number on the invoice, most clients quietly reset their own deadline.
  • You guess a rate that's not enforceable. Late fee caps are set at the state level in the US, and similar limits exist in the UK, EU, and Canada. Pulling a percentage out of thin air can leave you unable to defend it.
  • Cash flow takes the hit, not the client. Around 85% of freelancers report being paid late at some point. Without a documented late payment penalty, every overdue invoice quietly becomes an interest-free loan.
  • Following up feels personal. When the conversation is "please pay me", it feels like begging. When it's "per the contract, here's the late fee", it's just business.

Everything this late fee calculator handles

Built for the real situations freelancers and small business owners run into — not just a single percentage.

Monthly, annual, daily, or flat

Switch between 1.5% per month, an APR, a daily finance charge, or a flat dollar amount. The calculator does the math for whichever your contract uses.

Grace period support

Set a 0–30 day grace window. The calculator only charges the late fee on days outside the grace period, matching what most contracts actually say.

Multi-currency

USD, EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, JPY, and CNY are formatted natively, so the line you paste into your invoice already looks right.

Ready-to-paste invoice line

One click copies a clean line — "Late payment fee (1.5% per month, 24 days overdue): $12.00" — straight into your invoice or follow-up email.

How to calculate a late fee on an invoice

The same three inputs cover almost every contract you'll write.

  1. Step 1

    Enter the invoice amount

    Use the original invoice total. If the client has already paid part of it, use the remaining unpaid balance.

  2. Step 2

    Set the dates and rate

    Pick the original due date and today (or whatever date you're issuing the late fee on). Keep the default 1.5% per month or override it with whatever your contract specifies.

  3. Step 3

    Copy the late fee line

    The tool calculates the days overdue, the late payment fee, and the new total due. Hit copy and paste it into your invoice.

Why a late fee calculator beats guessing

When an invoice goes overdue, most freelancers do one of two things: send a vague reminder with no number, or panic-pick a percentage and hope it sticks. Both lose money. A real late fee calculator solves both — it gives you a defensible number tied to the days overdue, your contracted rate, and the original invoice amount.

Charging a clearly stated late payment fee isn't aggressive. It's the same thing every utility company, credit card, and Net 30 supplier does, and it's why 1.5% per month became the default rate for invoices in the US. The clients who pay on time never notice. The clients who don't suddenly take your due date seriously.

What rate should you actually charge?

The rule of thumb across freelancer forums, small business guides, and accounting platforms is simple:

  • 1% to 1.5% per month is the safe range for percentage-based fees. 1.5% per month works out to 18% APR, which is below the usury cap in most US states.
  • A flat $25–$50 works well for smaller invoices, where a percentage would be trivial.
  • A daily rate (like 0.05% per day) is rare but useful for short, time-sensitive projects.

Whichever rate you pick, the same two rules apply: it has to be in writing in the contract before work starts, and it has to be reasonable enough to defend if the relationship goes sideways. This calculator defaults to 1.5% per month for that reason, but every input is editable.

How to add a late fee to an existing invoice

The cleanest workflow is to keep the original invoice untouched and issue a follow-up invoice — or a corrected version — with two line items:

  1. The original unpaid balance.
  2. The late payment fee, with the exact rate and days overdue spelled out.

Use this calculator to get the second number. Copy the suggested line straight into the invoice, attach a short note pointing back to the late fee clause in the contract, and send it. The "feels like begging" energy disappears the moment the conversation is about a contract clause instead of a personal favor.

When the calculator says $0 — and what to do

If the result shows zero, it's almost always one of three things:

  • The "as of" date is on or before the due date (the invoice isn't actually overdue yet).
  • The grace period covers all the late days (lower it, or wait it out).
  • The rate is set to 0 (set your contracted percentage or flat fee).

Adjust those inputs and the late fee will recalculate instantly. There's no save button — the math runs as you type.

A note on legal and compliance

Late fee rules vary by country and, in the US, by state. This calculator handles the math, but it doesn't replace a contract review. Before charging interest on an overdue invoice, confirm:

  • The maximum late fee or APR allowed where the client is located.
  • That your contract or signed quote includes a clear late fee clause.
  • That the client received reasonable notice of the new total before any collections action.

Used the right way, a late fee isn't a punishment. It's a built-in incentive that pays for itself the first time a client pays five days earlier than they would have otherwise.

Frequently asked questions

What is a normal late fee on an invoice?
The most common late fee for freelancers and small businesses in the US is 1.5% per month (18% APR). Some businesses use a flat fee — typically $25 to $50 — instead of a percentage. Whatever you choose, the rate has to be in your contract before the work starts.
Is it legal to charge a late fee?
In most jurisdictions, yes — but only if the client agreed to it before you delivered the work. In the US, late fee caps are set at the state level (anywhere from 5% to 18% APR is typical). The UK, EU, and Canada have their own statutory late payment rules. This calculator gives you the math; check your local cap before invoicing.
How do I calculate a 1.5% monthly late fee?
Multiply the unpaid balance by 1.5% (0.015), then prorate by the number of days overdue divided by 30. On a $1,000 invoice that is 24 days late, that's $1,000 × 0.015 × (24 / 30) = $12.00. The calculator does this automatically and shows the line to paste into the invoice.
When should I add the late fee — at 1 day overdue or after a grace period?
Most freelancers wait through a 5–10 day grace period before adding the fee. That gives the client's accounts payable team breathing room and keeps you from charging over a one-day banking delay. Set the grace period in the calculator and only the days outside it will be charged.
Should I use a daily rate or a monthly rate?
Monthly (1.5%) is the most common and the easiest to defend. Daily rates (e.g., 0.05% per day) are more aggressive and work well for shorter contracts where even a week matters. Annual (APR) framing — 18% per year, for example — is the same math but reads as more formal.
Can I add a late fee retroactively if it wasn't in my contract?
No. Late fees only stick if the client agreed to them in the original contract or signed quote. If your current contract doesn't mention a late payment penalty, you can still send a polite reminder, but the fee itself isn't enforceable. Add a clear late fee clause to every future contract.
How do I word a late fee on an invoice?
Keep it short and reference the contract: "Late payment fee (1.5% per month, 24 days overdue): $12.00. Per Section 4 of our agreement." The copy-ready line in this calculator follows that pattern — clear, dated, and traceable back to the contract.
Does this calculator work for international invoices?
Yes. Pick the currency (USD, EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, JPY, or CNY) and the calculator formats the result correctly. The math is the same; just confirm the late fee cap in the client's country before you invoice.

Send the corrected invoice in two minutes

Once you have the late fee, generate a fresh invoice with the new total in InvoiceCat — free, no signup, downloadable as PDF.

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