
Behind every major retailer, manufacturer, and enterprise is a web of smaller suppliers keeping operations moving. But across the UK, too many of those businesses are being left waiting weeks or even months to get paid.
After years of mounting frustration over delayed invoices and the pressure they place on smaller firms, Britain is preparing its toughest commercial payment reforms in roughly 25 years.
The proposed legislation would introduce stricter rules around invoice settlement, including maximum payment limits and clearer standards for how companies manage invoice approvals and disputes. The objective is to improve cash flow for small businesses, reduce the financial strain cause by late payments, and bring greater transparency to corporate payment practices.
Keeping Cash Flow In-House
The economic stressors of recent years are one of the key reasons businesses delay supplier payments. These external pressures have made cash flow a primary measure of a company’s financial health, leading some enterprises to hold onto funds as long as possible by extending payment timelines.
For suppliers, late payments are more than just a month-end headache. Data from UK fintech Funding Circle found that roughly 14,000 British businesses shut down each year due to the effects of delayed B2B payments—equivalent to about 38 closures per day.
Standing in Stark Contrast
These persistent payment delays stand in sharp contrast to the growing adoption of real-time payments. Instant payment rails have gained substantial traction in B2B transactions, in part because real-time settlement provides businesses with greater control over liquidity and working capital.
Under the proposed UK bill, larger companies would not only be expected to pay suppliers on time, but also submit payment performance reports to regulators. The government also plans to make payment histories accessible to suppliers, giving them greater visibility before signing contracts.
What can appear to be short-term payment delays can, over time, create ripple effects throughout the economy—weakening supplier stability, constraining small business growth, and amplifying financial strain across supply chains.
“Slow and late payments are unfailingly one of, and often the single biggest reason, for small businesses to fail,” Hugh Thomas, Lead Commercial and Enterprise Analyst at Javelin Strategy & Research, told PaymentsJournal. “This is true for every developed economy we have data for.”
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