Getting Started

How to Invoice a Client for the First Time — Step by Step

8 min read·Updated 2025·InvoiceForge Team
In This Article
  1. Before You Send
  2. The 7-Step Process
  3. How to Send the Invoice
  4. What to Do If They Don't Pay
  5. Setting Up for Next Time

Sending your first invoice can feel awkward — especially if you're a freelancer who just finished a great project and now has to pivot to the business side of things. The good news: it's straightforward, and doing it right the first time sets the tone for your entire client relationship.

Before You Send

A few things to confirm before creating your invoice:

The 7-Step Process

1
Fill in your business details

Your full name or business name, address, email, and phone number. You'll only do this once — InvoiceForge saves it to your browser automatically for future invoices.

2
Add your client's details

Use the billing name and address they confirmed. If they have a specific AP email, use that instead of your main contact's email. Save them to your client list for next time.

3
Set your invoice number

Start at INV-0001 and increment from there. If you have multiple clients, you can prefix with client initials (e.g., TC-0001 for TechCorp). Consistency matters more than the format you choose.

4
Set invoice date and due date

Invoice date is today. Due date is typically 30 days from today (Net 30). For smaller projects or established clients, Net 15 is reasonable. Set a specific calendar date, not just "Net 30" — it removes ambiguity.

5
Add line items

List every deliverable with a description, quantity, and rate. Be specific — instead of "Consulting — $1,500" write "Brand strategy session — 3 hours @ $500/hr." Specificity builds confidence and reduces disputes.

6
Add tax if applicable

If you're required to charge sales tax or VAT, add it in the tax field. Include your tax registration number in the notes if required in your jurisdiction. When in doubt, consult a local accountant.

7
Write your payment terms and notes

State your accepted payment methods and due date clearly. Add a brief thank-you note — it's a small touch that clients remember. Include your bank details or payment link if using ACH or direct transfer.

Create Your First Invoice Now
Follow the steps above directly in InvoiceForge. Free, no account, download as PDF.
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How to Send the Invoice

Download your invoice as a PDF and attach it to an email. Keep the email short and professional:

Subject: Invoice #INV-0001 — [Project Name] — Due [Date]

Hi [Name], please find attached Invoice #INV-0001 for [brief project description] in the amount of $[total]. Payment is due by [date]. Please let me know if you have any questions. Thank you for the opportunity to work together.

Don't overthink it. A clean, professional PDF with a brief email is more effective than a long message explaining the invoice in the body.

Pro tip: Send the invoice the same day the work is delivered or the project wraps up. The longer you wait, the longer you wait to get paid. Prompt invoicing signals professionalism.

What to Do If They Don't Pay

If the due date passes without payment:

See our full guide: How to Follow Up on an Unpaid Invoice.

Setting Up for Next Time