Unpaid Invoices for Small Business: Why You Abandon International Collection Too Early
You wrote off the invoice. It was $47,000, owed by a company in Portugal, and after four months of emails that received no response, you decided the cost of pursuing it would exceed the recovery. That calculation was wrong. Here is why.
The Write-Off Reflex
Small businesses abandon international receivables at a rate that would horrify any credit manager at a larger firm. The reasoning is consistent: we cannot afford international lawyers, we do not understand Portuguese courts, and the amount is not large enough to justify the effort. Each of these assumptions is incorrect.
Professional international collection does not require you to fund litigation upfront. It does not require you to understand foreign courts. And the threshold for economic recovery is substantially lower than most SME owners believe.
The Cost Misconception
The single largest barrier to SME international collection is the belief that it is expensive. This belief persists because most business owners extrapolate from domestic legal costs. A solicitor charging $400 per hour to pursue a claim in a foreign jurisdiction will indeed make the economics unworkable for a $47,000 invoice.
Professional collection operates on a different model entirely. The cost is a percentage of recovered funds. If nothing is recovered, the cost is zero. The risk sits with the collection network, not the creditor. This is not a minor distinction. It fundamentally changes the calculation for every unpaid international invoice sitting in your aged receivables.
The "Too Small" Fallacy
There is no minimum threshold below which an international invoice becomes unrecoverable. A $12,000 receivable from a solvent debtor in Germany is eminently collectible. A $8,000 invoice from a trading company in the UAE can be pursued effectively through local channels. The question is never whether the amount is worth pursuing. The question is whether the debtor has the means to pay.
Most unpaid international invoices owed to small businesses are owed by companies that can pay. They choose not to because the creditor is small, distant, and — they calculate — unlikely to pursue the matter in their jurisdiction. This calculation is correct precisely until a local operative contacts them.
What Four Months of Emails Actually Cost You
The time you spent sending emails to Portugal was not free. Staff hours, management attention, the distraction from revenue-generating activities, and the stress of an unresolved financial exposure all carry real costs. Conservative estimate: $2,000 to $4,000 in internal costs for an outcome of zero recovery.
The same four months, had the case been referred to professional collection immediately, would likely have produced a resolution. The debtor in Portugal did not stop responding because your invoice was invalid. They stopped responding because your emails carried no consequence in their jurisdiction.
Professional collection within 90 days: 85%+ resolution rate. After 12 months of internal pursuit: below 40%. The window closes faster than SME owners expect.
The Limitation Period Risk
Every month you spend on internal pursuit is a month closer to the limitation deadline in the debtor's jurisdiction. In Portugal, the commercial limitation period is 20 years for most obligations, which provides comfort. In other jurisdictions, the window is far shorter. In the UAE, certain commercial claims prescribe in as little as one year. If your debtor is in a short-limitation jurisdiction, every month of email correspondence is a month of enforceable claim you will never recover.
The Decision Framework
If an international invoice is 60 days overdue and two follow-up communications have received no substantive response, the internal collection approach has failed. Not because you executed it poorly, but because internal collection lacks the single element that produces results in international cases: jurisdiction-specific leverage.
InterStation's assessment is free. The outcome is either a clear path to recovery or an honest evaluation that the case is not viable. Either way, the information is more valuable than another month of unanswered emails.
