Key stat: According to ASBFEO, 69% of Australian invoices are not paid within agreed terms. Most of those debts resolve without court action — but only if you act quickly and choose the right recovery method from the start.

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.

Ready to act? Send a lawyer-approved letter of demand in 5 minutes. Send a letter — $29

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

How much does a letter of demand cost in Australia?
A lawyer-approved letter of demand through SydneyCollect costs $29 flat — no commission, no subscription, no hidden fee. You pay once and keep 100% of whatever the debtor pays.
What commission do debt collection agencies charge?
Most Australian agencies charge 15–25% of the amount recovered, on a no-win no-fee basis. Some charge a lower percentage with a minimum fee. SydneyCollect's Managed Recovery tier charges 10% with a $150 minimum — among the lowest in the market for full managed services.
Is a letter of demand worth sending before engaging an agency?
Yes, almost always. For undisputed commercial debts, the letter is often the only step needed — and it costs $29. If it does not work, you escalate knowing the debtor has been formally notified, which strengthens your position in any subsequent proceedings.
Are there any hidden fees in debt collection?
SydneyCollect has no hidden fees: the letter costs $29, period. Managed Recovery is 10% of what is collected, minimum $150 — if nothing is recovered, you pay nothing. Court filing fees, if proceedings are required, are charged at cost — we do not mark these up. Traditional agencies sometimes charge admin fees, skip-tracing fees, or court fees on top of commission — always confirm the full cost structure before engaging.
Is there a minimum debt size for a letter of demand?
There is no minimum for the $29 letter — it is worth sending on debts of any size. For Managed Recovery, the $150 minimum commission means it makes economic sense for debts above approximately $1,500. For debts under $500, the letter of demand followed by small claims court (if needed) is usually the most cost-effective path.

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