It has referenced Leapers' 2025 research, which puts numbers on what most founders might already know – that 67.5% of self-employed people had problems with late payment last year. Of those, said it added stress to their lives.
81.2%
Unsurprising really. Late payment creates uncertainty, which is extremely draining. It also changes how you behave.
You start putting off chasing, avoid opening emails, second-guess yourself. You carry it alone because you think you should be able to "handle it".
Signs that late payment is putting you under strain
All business founders respond differently to pressure, but there are common warning signs. It's probably time to get support if you're:
feeling overwhelmed by money worries
feeling isolated (especially if you run your business alone)
struggling to concentrate or make decisions
putting off invoices, emails and anything to do with money
Pay attention to the bit about avoidance.
It's easy to tell yourself you're "just busy". Often, your brain is trying to protect you from stress. The downside is avoiding the problem only makes it grow more severe.
If your sleep is shot, your temper's shorter or you dread opening your laptop, treat that as a signal to act early. Not because you're being dramatic, but because you want to stop a spiral.
What to do today
This is a simple plan for the days when you need to deal with late payment but it feels beyond you.
Step 1: Get it out of your head
Grab a piece of paper or open a spreadsheet, and list the basics:
Invoice number and amount you're owed
When the payment was due
What was agreed (terms, purchase order, milestones)
Last contact with the client and what you said
Your next date of contact
This is about getting the problem onto a page so it stops circling your brain.
Step 2: Pick one small task, not the whole solution
Choose one task you can finish today in under 20 minutes:
Send one calm email to chase the payment, listing just the facts.
Pull the contract terms and attach them to the email.
Book a call with your accountant or bank.
Raise an enquiry with the SBC if the issue is within its remit.
Progress reduces anxiety. Not because the cash arrives instantly, but because you regain some control.
Step 3: Use the right route for disputes
If you're dealing with late payment from a larger business, the SBC may be able to help. It can:
explain your rights and options
help you think through how to approach late payment
in some cases, contact the business that owes you money
One important point. If you're considering legal action, check this guidance first, because starting legal proceedings can affect what support is available.
Step 4: Get cash flow advice before it becomes a crisis
Even a short conversation with the right service can buy you headspace.
If the problem is "I don't know how I'll cover next month", speak to a debt or money guidance service early, while you still have options.
With 10 years' experience working in politics, developing policy and leading strategic campaigns, Daniel Woolf leads on policy and government relations for Enterprise Nation.
Daniel began his career leading on health and policing and crime policy at the Greater London Authority while advising London's Deputy Mayor. He then moved to the CBI to lead its work on infrastructure finance. Most recently, Daniel played a leading role in AECOM's Advisory Unit, providing political and strategic policy advice to government bodies.