Australia's payment reality, in three numbers
If you invoice with 30-day terms and assume your customers will pay on time, you're not just being optimistic — you're being misled by the contract. Three Australian data sources tell the same story:
| Source | Finding | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| Atradius Payment Practices Barometer AU 2025 | Average DSO is 52–55 days for AU B2B | Almost twice the typical 30-day invoice term |
| ASBFEO Payment Times Report | 69% of AU small businesses are not paid within 30 days | Late payment is the norm, not the exception |
| Master Builders Australia (FY24) | 11.6% of construction invoices are over 60 days overdue | One in nine construction invoices is severely late |
DSO (Days Sales Outstanding) is the standard accountancy metric for how long it takes a business to collect cash after a sale. A 30-day invoice term should produce a DSO close to 30 — anything materially higher means buyers are stretching out payment.
Why large companies pay slowest
The Atradius 2025 data exposes a pattern most small business owners already know intuitively: the bigger your customer, the longer they take to pay. Average DSO by buyer size:
- Small buyers (under 50 staff): ~50 days
- Mid-market buyers (50–250 staff): ~52 days
- Large enterprise buyers (250+ staff): ~58 days
Large buyers run formal accounts payable cycles — invoice received, approved, batched, paid in the next monthly run. Even on "30-day" terms, the ops reality is closer to 60 days. ASBFEO has been pushing the federal government's Payment Times Reporting Scheme partly to expose this.
Industry breakdown — the slowest payers in AU
Sector data from Atradius and Master Builders shows wide variation:
| Industry | Typical payment behaviour | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Construction & infrastructure | ~65-day average terms; 11.6% >60 days overdue | Master Builders FY24 |
| Government & large enterprise | ~58 days average DSO despite 30-day terms | Atradius AU 2025 |
| Manufacturing | ~55 days average DSO | Atradius AU 2025 |
| Wholesale & retail trade | ~50 days average DSO | Atradius AU 2025 |
| Professional services | ~45-50 days; high incidence of "scope dispute" excuses | Atradius AU 2025 |
| Healthcare (B2B suppliers) | ~50 days; institutional buyers run slow | Atradius AU 2025 |
If your business is on the supplier side of any of these — particularly construction subcontractors and SMB suppliers to government — you should expect to wait, plan cash flow accordingly, and act early when an invoice slips.
The compounding cost of waiting
Late payment isn't just a cash-flow inconvenience. CreditorWatch's Business Risk Index data shows what happens to debtors who miss payments:
- 1 default — 20% probability of business failure within 12 months
- 2 defaults — 42% probability of business failure within 12 months
- 3+ defaults — 62% probability of business failure within 12 months
In plain English: the longer you let an unpaid invoice sit, the more likely your debtor is going broke. Waiting doesn't make recovery easier — it makes recovery less likely. By the time a debtor is 90+ days late, you're competing with their other creditors for whatever's left.
Read more: how likely are you to recover a debt in Australia?
What "good practice" actually looks like
Drawing from Atradius, ASBFEO, and the experience our solicitor partners see across NSW commercial work:
- Day 1–7 after due date: friendly reminder by email. Don't escalate yet.
- Day 8–14: firm follow-up referencing the invoice and stating an escalation deadline.
- Day 14: send a formal letter of demand. Most B2B debts resolve at this stage.
- Day 21–30: if unpaid, escalate — small claims court, debt collector, or solicitor depending on amount.
- Day 60+: probability of recovery drops sharply. Don't wait this long.
Frequently asked questions
Sources
- Atradius — Payment Practices Barometer Australia 2025 — atradius.com
- Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman (ASBFEO) — Payment Times Reporting — asbfeo.gov.au
- Master Builders Australia — Construction industry insolvency and payment data FY24 — masterbuilders.com.au
- CreditorWatch — Business Risk Index, payment default failure-risk curve — creditorwatch.com.au