Net Payment Terms Explained
Net 30 (and Net 60, Net 90) are standard B2B invoice payment terms. "Net" means the total invoice amount — no discounts — is due within the specified number of calendar days from the invoice date. Net 30 means the full amount is due within 30 days. Net 60 means 60 days. Net 90 means 90 days.
Payment terms are negotiated between buyer and seller and stated on every invoice. They directly impact your Days Sales Outstanding (DSO), cash flow, and accounts receivable aging profile. Longer terms mean more time before cash hits your bank account — and more time for things to go wrong.
The most important thing about payment terms: they are negotiable. Many companies accept unfavorable terms by default. Every 30 days of extended terms on a $5M AR portfolio ties up roughly $417,000 in cash. The ROI on shortening terms is immediate and real.
Standard B2B Payment Terms at a Glance
What You Need to Know About Payment Terms
- Net 30 is the B2B standard. Start there and only extend terms when there's a strategic reason (large contract, competitive necessity, enterprise relationship).
- Longer terms multiply DSO directly. If all customers pay exactly on time, Net 60 terms produce exactly double the DSO of Net 30 terms.
- The 2/10 Net 30 discount can cost more than it saves. A 2% discount on a $100K invoice is $2,000 to get paid 20 days earlier. That's a 36% annualized rate. Only offer if your cost of capital is higher than that.
- Late payment is the real problem — not the terms. Most companies with Net 30 terms actually collect on average in 45-60 days, because customers pay late regardless of stated terms.
- You can negotiate terms mid-relationship. A professional letter explaining your new payment policy, with 60-90 days notice, is entirely acceptable in B2B and is rarely a relationship-ender.
How Payment Terms Affect Your Cash Flow
| Terms | On $1M Annual Revenue | AR Tied Up (if paid on time) | DSO Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net 15 | $41,667 in AR | $41K | 15 days |
| Net 30 | $83,333 in AR | $83K | 30 days |
| Net 60 | $166,667 in AR | $167K | 60 days |
| Net 90 | $250,000 in AR | $250K | 90 days |
These figures assume on-time payment. In practice, customers pay late — so actual cash tied up is often 1.5-2x these estimates. The difference between Net 30 and Net 60 on a $5M revenue company can mean $400K-$800K in additional working capital requirements.
Payment Terms in Practice
Scenario: Negotiating Better Terms
Situation: A staffing company issues invoices on Net 60 terms. Average DSO is 75 days. On $8M annual revenue, that's $1.65M sitting in AR at any time.
Negotiation: They approach their top 10 clients (80% of revenue) to renegotiate to Net 30, offering a 1% early payment discount for clients who need more flexibility. 7 of 10 agree to Net 30 outright. 2 take Net 45 with the discount. 1 keeps Net 60.
Result: Average payment terms drop from Net 60 to Net 33. DSO drops from 75 days to ~48 days. AR balance drops from $1.65M to ~$1.05M — $600,000 freed from AR into cash. No new sales needed.
How AgentCollect Enforces Your Payment Terms
Terms Mean Nothing Without Enforcement
The most common failure in B2B collections: companies state Net 30 terms on their invoices but don't follow up until day 45 or 60. The customer learns quickly that "Net 30" actually means "whenever you get around to it." AgentCollect enforces your stated terms automatically — the moment an invoice passes its due date, collection outreach begins.
Clients who implement AgentCollect alongside shorter payment terms see the compounding effect immediately: stated terms tighten, enforcement begins on day 1 of being overdue, and actual collection time converges with stated terms — often for the first time in the company's history.
Related AR Glossary Terms
Net 30 / 60 / 90 FAQ
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