7 Ways to Tell a Customer Will Pay Late

Learn the early warning signs of payment delays – and how to spot risk before invoices are overdue.

3 Mins
06/24/2026

Most businesses don't suddenly stop paying invoices overnight. Instead, warning signs start to crop up months in advance. The problem is, these signs can be extremely subtle if you don’t know what you’re looking for. So how do you recognize the late payment red flags before they impact cash flow? 

A woman looking at data on a laptop and computer screens in an office

Start by understanding what you’re looking for. Here are seven of the most common signs that a customer may be a late payer you should avoid; and what to do if they’re an existing customer. 


1. Days beyond terms (DBT) fluctuates significantly

In a vacuum, delayed payments aren’t actually something you need to be incredibly concerned about. Unfortunately, you don’t do business in a vacuum. 

While it’s normal for companies to occasionally pay late, the key red flag you should be on the look-out for is inconsistency. 

Days Beyond Terms (DBT) shows you how long customers take to pay after agreed payment terms have expired. If a customer alternates between paying early one month and substantially late the next, that often suggests inconsistent cash flow or changing payment priorities.

These fluctuations can indicate:

  • Seasonal cash shortages
  • Poor internal financial controls
  • Liquidity pressure
  • Shifting supplier payment priorities

A one-off late payment here or there isn’t enough to sound the alarm, but when you can’t tell whether an invoice will be paid immediately or three months from now, that’s an issue. 

What to do:

  • Monitor payment behavior over multiple billing cycles.
  • Compare trends against similar companies in the same industry.
  • Consider increasing review frequency before extending additional credit.

2. DBT has been steadily increasing

Yes, consistency is key, but that goes both ways: you want consistently good, on-time payments. When a customer’s DBT is consistently rising, it’s another huge red flag. 

Colleagues looking over payment data in an office

This isn’t just a one-time, isolated delay. Instead, the customer is simply taking longer to pay each month, which turns this situation into a red flag.

These increasing late payments often signal:

  • Growing cash flow pressure
  • Reduced working capital
  • Financial deterioration
  • Overextension with suppliers

If you’re already working with this customer, you can use these early red flags to change your strategy and make sure invoice collections are prioritized. If you aren’t, this could be your warning sign to keep it that way. 

3. The number of outstanding bills is increasing

An increasing volume of outstanding bills may indicate the business is:

  • Struggling to generate sufficient cash
  • Prioritizing payments to specific suppliers
  • Expanding debt faster than revenue
  • Experiencing operational challenges
A woman looking at company payment data

Looking only at invoice age can hide emerging risk. Reviewing the total number and value of unpaid invoices provides a clearer picture of the business’ overall financial health.

If both outstanding invoices and payment delays are increasing together, it paints a riskier picture of the company overall. If you’re still vetting this business as a potential customer or partner, a red flag like this means it’s worth digging deeper or changing proposed terms.

4. Major supply chain disruptions may stifle cash flow

External events can quickly affect even financially healthy businesses.

Examples include:

  • Supplier shortages
  • Shipping delays
  • Tariffs
  • Natural disasters
  • Rising raw material costs
  • Labor shortages
A person looking at business credit risk files in an office

When companies cannot obtain inventory or deliver products, revenue slows while operating expenses continue.

It’s a vicious cycle: the business is struggling to fulfil obligations to customers, which means their cash flow is restricted, which means they then struggle to pay their bills. As a credit professional, staying on top of things like global news and current events that could impact supply chain can go a long way to predicting when late invoices could start piling up. 

Monitor:

  • Industry news
  • Supplier disruptions
  • Customer sectors experiencing economic pressure
  • Changes in purchasing activity

5. Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) has increased

While DBT measures payment performance from your perspective, Days Sales Outstanding (DSO) reflects how efficiently a company collects payments from its own customers.

A consistently increasing DSO may indicate:

  • Customers are paying them more slowly
  • Collection processes have weakened
  • Revenue quality is declining
  • Cash conversion cycles are lengthening

The result? Less cash available to pay suppliers on time.

A rising DSO doesn't automatically predict late payments, but when combined with increasing DBT or growing outstanding invoices, it becomes a much stronger risk indicator.

6. Invoice disputes are creating administrative bottlenecks

Sometimes, predicting risk is about human nature, not cold, hard, numbers. Invoices could be late or unpaid because they’re tied up in complicated administrative processes or disputes.

Repeated disputes involving:

  • Purchase order mismatches
  • Pricing discrepancies
  • Missing documentation
  • Incorrect invoice details
  • Approval delays

can significantly slow payment cycles.

These disputes can often just be the cost of doing business. But if there’s a sudden increase in disputes, especially from a customer with no history of disputing invoices, something slightly more sinister could be at play. A business may be intentionally delaying payment as a last-ditch effort to buy time and manage their cash flow. 

The best approach? Resolve legitimate issues quickly, while monitoring for recurring patterns that could indicate broader financial stress.

7. Communication is breaking down

You’ve probably heard that communication is key in relationships, but did it ever occur to you that that means business relationships, too? If communication is breaking down between you your customers, it could be a warning sign that late payments are on the horizon. 

Watch for changes such as:

  • Emails going unanswered
  • Phone calls not returned
  • Payment promises repeatedly missed
  • Finance contacts becoming unavailable
  • Frequent changes in accounts payable personnel
  • Vague explanations for delayed payments

When communication deteriorates alongside worsening payment behavior, it’s pretty likely that payment delays are going to continue. And if communication suddenly stops altogether, it may be time to reassess the customer's credit exposure.

Maintaining open dialogue gives you both the best opportunity to resolve issues before they escalate.

Late payment warning signs are strongest when they appear together

No single indicator guarantees a customer will pay late, but risk increases significantly when multiple warning signs appear simultaneously.

Businesses that continuously monitor payment behavior, financial trends, and operational developments are far better positioned to reduce bad debt and strengthen collections performance.

Spot late payment red flags early

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is Days Beyond Terms (DBT)?

Days Beyond Terms measures how many days after agreed payment terms a customer typically pays an invoice. It provides a simple way to monitor payment performance and identify deteriorating payment habits over time.

What is the difference between DBT and DSO?

DBT measures how late a customer pays you beyond agreed terms. DSO (Days Sales Outstanding) measures how long a business takes to collect payment from its own customers. Both metrics provide valuable insight into cash flow health.

Does one late payment mean a customer is high risk?

Not necessarily. Isolated late payments happen for many legitimate reasons. The bigger concern is a consistent trend of worsening payment behavior or multiple risk indicators appearing together.

How often should customer payment risk be reviewed?

High-value or strategic customers should ideally be reviewed monthly, while lower-risk accounts can often be assessed quarterly. Automated monitoring makes it easier to identify meaningful changes as they happen.

Can external events affect payment performance?

Absolutely. Supply chain disruptions, inflation, labor shortages, regulatory changes, and broader economic conditions can all reduce a company's cash flow and increase the likelihood of delayed supplier payments.

Lina Chindamo

About the Author

Lina Chindamo, Director, Enterprise Accounts, Creditsafe

Lina Chindamo is currently Director, Enterprise Accounts at Creditsafe Canada, and a Certified Credit Professional (CCP) with over 25 years of experience in credit risk management.  She has held senior leadership roles with leading companies in multiple industries in the Canadian market such as Sony Electronics, Maple Leaf Foods, and Mondelez Canada. Her experience as a credit professional along with her current role as Director, Enterprise Accounts who works closely with c-suite partners and credit teams across all industries makes her a well-rounded credit professional who is well respected in our industry.

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