The three ways businesses recover debt in Australia
There is no single "debt collection cost" — what you pay depends entirely on which recovery method you choose. Each has a different price point, a different level of effort on your part, and a different use case.
| Method | Cost | Best for | You keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| Letter of demand (SydneyCollect) | $29 flat — no commission | Undisputed debts where the debtor just needs a formal push | 100% of recovered amount |
| Managed Recovery (SydneyCollect) | 10% commission, minimum $150 | Debts that did not resolve after a letter, or debtors who are unresponsive | 90% of recovered amount |
| Traditional agency | 15–25% commission on recovery | Large debts, long-overdue accounts, commercial portfolios | 75–85% of recovered amount |
| Small Claims Court (self-represented) | $97–$371 filing fee (varies by state and amount) | Disputed debts under the local court limit (~$20k–$100k depending on state) | 100% if judgment enforced, plus costs may be awarded |
What each method actually costs on a real debt
The table above is abstract until you run the numbers. Here is what each option costs on three common debt sizes.
| Debt amount | Letter ($29 flat) | Managed (10%) | Agency (20% mid-range) |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500 | $29 | $150 (minimum) | $100 |
| $2,000 | $29 | $200 | $400 |
| $5,000 | $29 | $500 | $1,000 |
| $10,000 | $29 | $1,000 | $2,000 |
| $25,000 | $29 | $2,500 | $5,000 |
On a $10,000 debt the cost difference between a letter and a traditional agency is $1,971. Even compared to Managed Recovery, the letter saves you $971 — if the debtor pays after receiving it. That is why the letter should almost always be the first step, regardless of debt size.
When is a letter of demand enough?
The letter works when the debt is undisputed and the debtor is solvent. Most commercial debtors who are simply slow to pay — because of cash flow, disorganisation, or the assumption you won't follow up — respond to formal legal correspondence. A lawyer-approved letter on official letterhead signals seriousness in a way that a follow-up email or phone call does not.
According to the Sydney Collect 2026 Debt Collection Report Section 8, most debt recovery that occurs without court proceedings happens at the letter-of-demand stage. The letter is not a guarantee — but at $29, the risk of sending it is negligible.
The letter is less likely to work when: the debtor is already insolvent (see insolvency warning signs), the debt is genuinely disputed, or you have had no response to multiple informal requests over a long period. In those cases, escalation to Managed Recovery or small claims court is the right next step.
How commission-based recovery works — and where the cost difference lies
If the letter of demand does not result in payment, the next step is commission-based recovery. SydneyCollect's Managed Recovery charges 10% of the amount actually collected, with a $150 minimum. There is no upfront fee and no charge if nothing is collected.
The 10% rate is among the lowest in the market. Most Australian agencies charge 15–25% because their model involves a human team managing the full recovery lifecycle — from initial contact through to enforcement of judgment. For large commercial debts (above $50,000), complex disputes, or debtors across multiple states, that full-service model has genuine value.
For the typical small-business debt (under $10,000, single undisputed invoice, Australian debtor), paying 20% commission means giving up $2,000 on a $10,000 debt before you have even tried the $29 option. The economics rarely justify starting with an agency. See our full comparison in SydneyCollect vs debt collection agencies.
The cost of doing nothing
Late payment carries a compounding cost that is easy to underestimate. Atradius's AU 2025 Payment Practices Barometer reports that the average days sales outstanding (DSO) for Australian businesses is 52–55 days — meaning the typical invoice is paid nearly two months late. For a business carrying 60-day-late receivables on a $10,000 invoice at a borrowing rate of 8%, the implicit cost of that delay is approximately $131 per month in financing cost.
Add the time spent on manual follow-up — phone calls, emails, internal credit checks — and the true cost of a late debt is often two to three times the face value of the debt by the time it is resolved. Against that benchmark, a $29 intervention cost is trivially small.
Choosing the right option for your debt
Use this decision guide to pick the right approach:
| Your situation | Recommended option |
|---|---|
| Debt is undisputed and debtor is still trading | $29 Letter of demand — try this first |
| Letter ignored, debt over $1,500 | Managed Recovery (10% commission, no win no fee) |
| Debt genuinely disputed by the debtor | Small claims court or solicitor — letter alone won't resolve a disputed claim |
| Debtor showing insolvency warning signs | Act immediately with a letter + escalate fast — delay loses priority in a liquidation |
| Debt very small (under $500) | $29 letter — agency commission minimum ($150) exceeds the economics |
| Large or complex commercial debt ($50k+) | Consider Managed Recovery first; escalate to specialist agency if recovery stalls |
Frequently asked questions about debt collection pricing
Sources
- ASBFEO — Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman, Payment Times Research — asbfeo.gov.au
- Sydney Collect 2026 Australian Debt Collection Report, Section 8: Recovery Timelines — sydneycollect.com
- Atradius Payment Practices Barometer Australia 2025 — group.atradius.com