Getting paid on time

This is the key to staying on top of your cash flow. Here’s how to keep the money you’re owed flowing in, whether you're contracting, a sole trader or running a business.

If someone doesn’t pay their invoice you’re left financing the cost of the work until it’s settled — which can be costly if you’ve paid for materials or staff to do the job.

Sending invoices and chasing debtors is part of getting the job done.

Creating an invoice

On each invoice you need to include:

Taxable supply information for GST

From 1 April 2023, the requirement to use tax invoices has been replaced with a more general requirement to provide and keep certain records known as taxable supply information.

The rules set out the minimum set of records required to support the figures in your GST returns.

The definition of taxable supplies and how you calculate GST has not changed, only the rules relating to invoicing and record keeping.

Find out more about rules for taxable supply information on the IR website.

Taxable supply information is only needed for supplies worth more than $200.

But it’s a good idea to keep these for your records — and if you want to make a claim.

Send invoices promptly

Don’t procrastinate. Send the invoice as soon as the work’s completed, while it’s still fresh in your customer’s mind. Consider the fastest way to invoice your customers, whether in person with a mobile EFTPOS machine or electronically using accounting software.

Consider using eInvoicing for invoices sent to other businesses - where invoice information is sent directly between buyers’ and suppliers’ financial systems, even if these systems are different. It improves accuracy and security, reduces process time and speeds up payments.

Your invoicing software may already be enabled for eInvoicing. Go to einvoicing.govt.nz for more information, including how to get started.

Invoicing tips

Tips to help you get paid on time:

Expert view

Expert view

Warning signs of missed payments

If someone who owes you money is in financial stress, you’ll probably notice changes to their payment patterns, says Anna Chartres of Christchurch law firm Lane Neave.

“They’ll be deviating from your standard credit terms and conditions which they may have previously complied with. You might see that they are slow on payments, you have cheques which are being dishonoured, and that’s an early indication that something might be awry,” she says.

“Make sure you have terms and conditions of trade in place. If you’re supplying goods, it’s a good idea to grant a security over those goods and say that title in the goods — the actual ownership of the goods — doesn’t pass until you have been paid.”