Sydney, NSW
Sydney businesses: recover unpaid debts fast
SydneyCollect is based in Sydney and built specifically for NSW businesses. Whether you're in the CBD, Inner West, North Shore, or Greater Sydney — send a free letter of demand in 5 minutes.
✓ B2B debts only
✓ Lawyer-backed letters
✓ NSW-based, Australia-wide
✓ Free for basic letters
Debt recovery in Sydney
Sydney is Australia's largest commercial hub with over 200,000 registered businesses. Payment disputes are common across construction, professional services, hospitality, and retail. A formal letter of demand is the fastest first step — and for most Sydney B2B debts, it's enough.
A letter of demand is the required first step before most court actions and is the most cost-effective way to recover a debt without litigation. Send one today in 5 minutes — free.
Send a free letter of demandHow it works
Today
Enter details — letter sent to debtor
Day 7
Follow-up reminder sent
Day 14
Final notice sent
Day 21
Lawyer referral if still unpaid
Industries we serve in Sydney
Debt recovery in Sydney — your questions
What is the statute of limitations for debt in NSW? ▼
In NSW, the limitation period for most contract debts is 6 years from the date the debt became due, under the Limitation Act 1969 (NSW). After 6 years, court action may be time-barred.
Is there a small claims court in Sydney for debt recovery? ▼
Yes. The NSW Local Court (Small Claims Division) handles debts up to $20,000. NCAT handles consumer disputes. For debts over $100,000, the District Court or Supreme Court is appropriate.
Do I need a Sydney-based lawyer? ▼
No. For a letter of demand, jurisdiction doesn't matter — we handle NSW-wide. For court action, our lawyer partners are NSW-practising solicitors.
Can I send a letter of demand to a company registered interstate? ▼
Yes. A letter of demand can be sent to any Australian business regardless of state registration.
Ready to recover your debt?
Send a free, lawyer-backed letter of demand to any Australian debtor — takes 5 minutes.
Send free letter of demand