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Freelancing Formula

Invoice Late Fee Formula

This formula helps freelancers calculate the appropriate late fee to charge clients for overdue invoices, ensuring fair compensation for delayed payments and encouraging promptness.

Bottom Line

This formula helps freelancers calculate the appropriate late fee to charge clients for overdue invoices, ensuring fair compensation for delayed payments and encouraging promptness.

Best Next MoveFreelance & Consulting

Invoice Late Fee & Interest Calculator

Calculate late-payment penalties from grace days, fixed fees, and annual-interest terms.

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Formula

Copy the exact expression or work through it step by step below.

Interest = Invoice Amount x (Annual Interest / 365) x Chargeable Days; Total Due = Invoice Amount + Interest + Fixed Late Fee (Chargeable Days = Days Late - Grace Days, not below zero)

Variables

TD

Total Due

The final amount owed, in currency units: invoice principal plus prorated interest plus the fixed late fee. Confirm it stays within the maximum your jurisdiction or contract allows.

IA

Invoice Amount

The unpaid invoice principal interest is charged on, in currency units. Exclude any prior late fees unless the contract compounds them.

AIR

Annual Interest

The yearly interest rate, as a percent. The tool prorates it by day, dividing by 365. Often capped by usury or commercial-debt law.

DL

Days Late

Calendar days the invoice is past its due date, as a count. Entered directly, not derived from dates.

GD

Grace Days

Days after the due date before charges start. Chargeable days equal days late minus grace days, floored at zero.

FLF

Fixed Late Fee

A flat charge added once, in currency units, but only when at least one chargeable day exists.

Step By Step

  1. 1

    Set the baseline case with the real calculator inputs.

    Invoice Amount = $5,400, Days Late = 24, Annual Interest Percent = 12.0%, Fixed Late Fee = $40.00, Grace Days = 7

  2. 2

    Confirm the rate is annual; the tool prorates it by day, dividing by 365, and only counts days past the grace period.

    12% a year over 17 chargeable days is 12% times 17/365, about 0.56% of the invoice.

  3. 3

    Apply the formula and read the first calculator outputs, not just the headline assumption.

    The calculator lands with total amount due at $5,470.18, interest at $30.18, and chargeable days at 17.

  4. 4

    Re-run at the statutory maximum rate to check whether your contractual rate leaves recoverable interest on the table or risks being unenforceable.

    On a $5,000 invoice 90 days late with a 7-day grace, 18% a year yields about $205 in interest (5,000 times 0.18 times 83/365).

Worked Example

Invoice Late Fee sample case

Invoice Amount

$5,400

Days Late

24

Annual Interest Percent

12.0%

Fixed Late Fee

$40.00

Grace Days

7

Chargeable days = 24 - 7 = 17. Interest = $5,400 times 12% times 17/365 = $30.18. Total Due = $5,400 + $30.18 interest + $40.00 fixed fee = $5,470.18.

Total amount due is $5,470.18: $30.18 of prorated interest plus a $40.00 fixed late fee on 17 chargeable days.

Common Variations

Enter the rate as an annual percent; the tool prorates it daily, so convert any monthly rate to its annual equivalent first.
Scenario variants are useful because fixed assumptions rarely survive contact with real life unchanged.
Use Invoice Late Fee Interest Calculator to compare the baseline result with one stressed case before relying on a single answer.

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Sources & References

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