Evasive International Debtors: How to Recognise and Counter Stalling Tactics
The payment is processing. The accounts department is restructuring. The signatory is travelling. The CFO is reviewing the invoice. The bank transfer was initiated last Tuesday. These are not explanations. They are instruments of delay, deployed with precision by debtors who have no intention of paying voluntarily.
The Anatomy of Commercial Evasion
International debtors who intend to evade payment rarely refuse outright. Outright refusal invites immediate legal action. Instead, they deploy a graduated series of delays designed to exhaust the creditor's patience, consume their resources, and — most critically — run down the limitation clock in the relevant jurisdiction.
Recognising these tactics early is the difference between recovery and write-off.
Tactic 1: The Perpetual Promise
The debtor agrees to pay. Enthusiastically. Repeatedly. Payment is always imminent — next week, after the board meeting, once the quarterly close is complete. Each promise is specific enough to sound credible and vague enough to be unenforceable. The creditor waits. Months pass. The promise renews.
Counter: Set a hard deadline with documented consequences. After two broken payment commitments, the matter is no longer a credit management issue. It is a collection case.
Tactic 2: The Dispute Fabrication
Three months after delivery, the debtor discovers a quality issue. The specification was unclear. The delivery was late. The goods do not match the sample. These disputes materialise exclusively when payment is due, never when the goods were received and accepted.
Counter: Demand the dispute in writing with specific documentation. Fabricated disputes collapse under formal scrutiny because the debtor cannot produce evidence for problems that do not exist. Separate any legitimate partial dispute from the undisputed balance and pursue the latter immediately.
Tactic 3: The Contact Disappearance
The person who authorised the purchase is no longer available. They have left the company, changed roles, or simply stopped responding. The replacement has no knowledge of the account. The creditor must start from zero, explaining the history to someone who has no authority to resolve it.
Counter: Escalate above the disappeared contact immediately. Address correspondence to the managing director or CFO by name. In most jurisdictions, the company's obligation survives personnel changes. The debt belongs to the entity, not the individual.
Tactic 4: The Jurisdictional Shield
The debtor relies on the creditor's ignorance of foreign legal systems. They know that pursuing a claim in their jurisdiction is expensive, slow, and uncertain. They calculate — correctly, in most cases — that the creditor will write off a five-figure debt rather than fund litigation in an unfamiliar court.
Counter: This is precisely where professional collection with local jurisdiction presence neutralises the advantage. A local operative removes the geographic shield entirely. The debtor is no longer protected by distance.
Tactic 5: The Partial Payment Drip
The debtor sends 10% of the outstanding amount. Then another 5% three weeks later. Each payment is accompanied by assurances that the balance will follow. The partial payments serve two purposes: they reset limitation periods in some jurisdictions, and they make the creditor reluctant to escalate against a debtor who is "making an effort."
Counter: Accept partial payments but never treat them as evidence of good faith without a documented repayment schedule. If the schedule is broken, escalate immediately. Partial payments without a binding commitment are a stalling instrument, not a resolution.
Tactic 6: The Corporate Restructure
The debtor company changes its name, transfers assets to a related entity, or files for a form of restructuring that temporarily halts enforcement. The debt remains, but the entity that owes it has become harder to pursue. Creditors who are not monitoring the debtor's corporate status often discover the restructure months after it occurred.
Counter: Monitor corporate filings in the debtor's jurisdiction. Identify successor entities and related companies before the debtor completes the asset transfer. In many jurisdictions, fraudulent conveyance provisions allow creditors to pursue assets transferred to defeat claims.
Tactic 7: The Regulatory Smokescreen
The debtor claims that regulatory requirements prevent payment. Currency controls, compliance reviews, anti-money laundering procedures — all deployed as reasons why payment cannot be made despite willingness. In some jurisdictions, these claims have a grain of truth. In most, they are fabrications.
Counter: Verify the regulatory claim independently. A local operative with knowledge of the jurisdiction's actual regulatory environment can distinguish legitimate compliance delays from manufactured ones within days, not months.
Seven tactics. One objective: consume enough time for the creditor to lose interest or the limitation period to expire. Professional collection disrupts both.
The Common Thread
Every evasion tactic shares a single dependency: time. The debtor needs the creditor to move slowly, respond cautiously, and escalate reluctantly. Professional collection with jurisdiction-specific capability compresses the timeline and removes the debtor's primary advantage.
InterStation identifies these patterns within the first assessment because we have seen every variation across 40+ jurisdictions. The counter is not more patience. It is informed, calibrated pressure applied where the debtor is most exposed.
