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Payment Terms

Payment terms define the agreed conditions for when and how an invoice must be paid. They are created at the organization level and then assigned to individual partners — so you define your standard terms once and reuse them across your entire partner directory.

What Payment Terms Define

FieldDefinition
NameA human-readable label that describes the terms (e.g., “Net 30”, “2/10 Net 30”, “Due on Receipt”).
CodeA short system identifier (e.g., NET30, DOR). Used in references and reports.
DaysThe number of days from the invoice date until payment is due.
Discount percentAn early payment discount, expressed as a percentage (optional).
Discount daysThe number of days within which the early payment discount is available (optional).
DescriptionA detailed plain-language explanation of the terms (optional). Useful for teams who are not familiar with payment term codes.

When both discount percent and discount days are set, it creates an early payment incentive: “pay within X days for a Y% discount, or pay the full amount by the due date.” When neither is set, it is a straightforward net-days arrangement.

Common Payment Terms

Here are typical terms you might define for your organization:

TermCodeDaysDiscountMeaning
Net 30NET3030Full payment due within 30 days of the invoice date. The most common standard term.
Net 60NET6060Full payment due within 60 days. Common for larger orders or long-standing relationships.
2/10 Net 302-10-30302% within 10 daysPay within 10 days and get a 2% discount. Otherwise, the full amount is due in 30 days.
Due on ReceiptDOR0Payment is due immediately when the invoice is received. Common for small or one-time transactions.
PrepaidPREPAID0Full payment required before goods are shipped. Used for new partners or high-risk transactions.
Net 90NET9090Extended payment window of 90 days. Sometimes used for government contracts or seasonal businesses.

Using Payment Terms with Partners

Each partner can have separate payment terms for their supplier and client roles:

  • Supplier payment terms — the conditions under which you pay the supplier for goods you purchase. For example, your metal supplier might give you Net 60 terms.
  • Client payment terms — the conditions under which the client pays you for goods you sell. For example, a retail client might be on Due on Receipt while a corporate client has Net 30.

A partner who is both a supplier and a client can have different terms for each side of the relationship. This is common — the terms you negotiate as a buyer are often different from the terms you offer as a seller.

When payment terms are assigned to a partner, they serve as the default for new transactions with that partner. This pre-fills the terms on new documents, saving time and ensuring consistency.

Setting Up Payment Terms

  1. Go to Business Partners > Payment Terms and click Create Payment Terms.
  2. Fill in the name, code, days, and optionally the discount fields.
  3. Add a description if the terms might be unclear to other team members.
  4. Save.

Best Practices for Setup

  • Define your standard set during initial setup — create all the payment terms your organization commonly uses before you start adding partners. This way, the terms are ready to assign immediately.
  • Keep the list manageable — most organizations use 4-8 standard terms. Having too many creates confusion and makes it harder to enforce consistent policies.
  • Use clear, standard names — “Net 30” and “2/10 Net 30” are universally understood in business. Avoid inventing non-standard names that your team would need to learn.
  • Deactivate rather than delete — when a payment term is no longer used, deactivate it instead of deleting it. Existing partners and historical documents still reference it, and deleting would break those references.