Invoice Due Date Calculator
Payment terms like net 30 mean the invoice is due a set number of days after it is issued. Receipt Caker's free due date calculator takes your invoice date and the net terms, then shows the exact payment due date and how long is left to pay.
- How do I calculate an invoice due date?
- Receipt Caker calculates a due date by adding the net payment days to the invoice date: due date = invoice date + net days. Pick the date and choose net 15, 30, 45 or 60 above, and it shows the exact due date and the days remaining.
- Time to pay
- 30 days
- Payment due
- August 9, 2026
Calculating a due date from net terms
Payment terms like net 30 mean the invoice is due a set number of days after it is issued, so the due date is simply the invoice date plus the net days. An invoice dated 9 July on net 30 terms is due 8 August. Receipt Caker's due date calculator adds the net period to the date you pick and shows both the exact due date and how many days remain to pay.
Counting is done in calendar days, not business days, unless your terms say otherwise. Pick the invoice date, choose net 15, 30, 45, or 60, and the result appears immediately — no counting on a calendar or risking an off-by-one error.
What net 30 actually means
Net 30 means the full invoice amount is due 30 calendar days after the invoice date. The word net refers to the total owed, and the number is the credit period you extend to the customer. Net 15 and net 60 work the same way with 15 or 60 days, and the pattern generalises to any net figure.
Terms are usually counted from the invoice date, but some businesses count from delivery or from month-end, which can shift the due date by weeks. Because those variants exist, always state clearly which start point you mean. This calculator counts calendar days from the invoice date you enter.
Choosing terms that protect cash flow
Shorter terms like net 15 get you paid faster and ease cash flow, while longer terms like net 60 are sometimes expected by larger business customers. Net 30 sits comfortably in the middle and is a widely recognised default. The right choice balances your need for cash against what your clients will realistically accept.
Offering a small early-payment discount — for example, a 2% reduction if paid within 10 days — can encourage faster settlement without changing your headline terms. Whatever you decide, put both the terms and the calculated due date on the invoice itself so there is no ambiguity.
Putting the due date on the invoice
Once you have the due date, show it on the invoice alongside the issue date and the payment terms, so the customer knows exactly when payment is expected. A clearly printed due date reduces disputes and makes any later late-fee claim easier to justify.
Build the document in the Receipt Caker generator, fill in the invoice date, terms, and due date fields, and export a PNG or PDF. The tool produces the document but does not track the date or send a reminder when it passes — following up is handled through your own process, and the late fee calculator helps you price any charge if it does.