Blog
Expert Advice
4 min read
17 Apr 2025
Blog
Expert Advice
4 min read
17 Apr 2025
Less than half of suppliers are paid on time. These late payments don’t just hurt individual businesses – they’re harming the economy.
Late payments don’t just harm individual suppliers; they impact whole industries, slowing growth, blocking up supply chains and even impacting jobs and pay. Yet despite these wide-reaching consequences, the problem persists — 51% of suppliers report frequent late payment, with 20% experiencing delays of more than 30 days.
While larger businesses may have the financial resilience to absorb delayed payments, small suppliers feel the impact even more acutely. Almost half (49%) of the respondents in SAP Taulia’s latest annual Supplier Survey were small businesses with revenues under $10 million. For many of these smaller suppliers, late payments can determine survival.
Less than half (41%) of suppliers say their buyers typically pay on time, a figure that has remained unchanged from last year but is a steep decline from the 54% who reported as such in 2019. Worse still, some buyers habitually pay well beyond due dates – 20% of suppliers reported that payments are typically delayed by over 30 days, and 7% experienced typical delays exceeding 45 days. Only 3% of buyers pay early, offering rare relief in an otherwise cashflow-challenged landscape.
There are many reasons why buyers may pay late – errors in an invoice, inefficient systems, or their own financial challenges are just a few. But while these delays may be understandable, they still create significant challenges for suppliers, especially smaller businesses that depend on timely payments to operate and grow.
Beyond those individual suppliers, late payments have knock-on effects on supply chains, business relationships and ultimately the broader economy. Creating a payments environment where both buyers and suppliers can succeed means finding solutions that work for both sides.
When suppliers can’t count on being paid on time, the financial uncertainty trickles down through the entire supply chain. Here are some of the impacts:
None of this is good news for the economy. Late payments cost the global economy $1 trillion annually, according to the European Commission, while a 2021 survey by QuickBooks found that mid-sized businesses in the US were owed an average of $300,000 in late payments, with 89% saying these were holding back growth. For small businesses, the threat can be existential – a report published in 2016 by the UK’s Federation of Small Businesses said that 50,000 companies would have avoided going out of business in 2014 if they had been paid on time.
Evidently, buyers and suppliers alike need payment solutions.
Many suppliers are turning to early payments to help mitigate the impacts of slow-paying customers, with nearly two-thirds (63%) of respondents in our Supplier Survey expressing interest in doing so. For small businesses, reliance is even more pronounced – 70% of respondents with revenues under $10 million reported using an early payment solution in the past year.
Early payments provide a practical solution by offering suppliers quicker access to funds they are already owed. Importantly, early payment solutions work in favor of both suppliers and buyers: suppliers get access to working capital when they need it, while buyers benefit from strengthening their supply chains and securing early payment discounts.
The SAP Taulia Supplier Survey analyses responses from more than 9000 businesses across 129 countries. For more insights, read the full report
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