How to Ask Clients for a Deposit: 7 Email Scripts That Actually Work
You know you should be asking for deposits. You've probably been burned at least once by a client who ghosted after delivery. But the actual asking part? That's where most freelancers freeze.
This guide gives you seven copy-paste email scripts for every deposit scenario you'll face. No vague advice about "just ask for it" — these are the actual words to use.
How Much Deposit Should You Ask For?
Before the scripts, here's the quick reference:
| Scenario | Recommended Deposit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| New client, first project | 50% | No track record — protect yourself |
| Existing client, new project | 25-30% | Established trust, lower risk |
| Large project (£5,000+) | 25% + milestones | Break it into manageable chunks |
| Small project (under £500) | 100% | Not worth the chasing risk |
| Rush job / tight deadline | 50-100% | You're dropping other work for this |
| Retainer / ongoing work | First month upfront | Covers your time while invoices are processed |
Script 1: New Client — Standard 50% Deposit Request
USE WHEN: First project with a new client
Hi [Client Name],
Great to confirm the details for [brief project description]. I'm looking forward to getting started.
To kick things off, here's how the payment works:
• 50% deposit (£[amount]) due before work begins
• Remaining 50% due on delivery/completion
I'll send the deposit invoice over once we've signed off on the brief. Once payment clears, I'll block out your dates in my calendar and we'll be underway.
Any questions, just shout.
Best,
[Your Name]
Script 2: Transitioning Existing Clients to Deposits
USE WHEN: You've been invoicing on delivery and want to switch
Hi [Client Name],
Hope you're well. Quick housekeeping note — I'm updating my payment process across all clients from [month].
Going forward, I'll be working on a deposit basis:
• 25% deposit when a project is confirmed
• Balance on completion (as before)
For existing clients like yourself, I've kept the deposit at 25% rather than the standard 50% I ask from new clients. Nothing changes about how we work together — this is just a process update on my end to keep cash flow manageable as the business grows.
The updated terms will apply from our next project. Happy to chat if you have any questions.
Cheers,
[Your Name]
Script 3: Large Project — Milestone Payment Schedule
USE WHEN: Project is £5,000+ or spans multiple weeks/months
Hi [Client Name],
Following our discussion on [project], here's the proposed payment schedule broken into milestones:
Total project fee: £[total]
1. Deposit (25%) — £[amount] — due on project confirmation, before work begins
2. Milestone 1 (25%) — £[amount] — due on delivery of [first deliverable, e.g. initial designs / wireframes / first draft]
3. Milestone 2 (25%) — £[amount] — due on delivery of [second deliverable]
4. Final payment (25%) — £[amount] — due on project completion and handover
Each milestone is invoiced on delivery, with payment due within 7 days. Work on the next phase begins once the current milestone payment is received.
This structure keeps things transparent for both of us and ensures you're only paying for work you've seen and approved. Shall I draw up the formal proposal?
Best,
[Your Name]
Script 4: Rush Job — Premium Terms
USE WHEN: Client needs fast turnaround and you're rearranging your schedule
Hi [Client Name],
I can accommodate the [date] deadline. To make it work, I'll need to rearrange some commitments, so I'm happy to prioritise this on the following terms:
• Rush fee: [X]% surcharge on the standard rate (total: £[amount])
• Payment: 100% upfront before I begin
Full payment upfront is standard for rush work since I'm clearing my schedule specifically for this. I can send the invoice now and get started the moment it clears.
Let me know if you'd like to proceed.
Best,
[Your Name]
Script 5: Following Up When Deposit Is Late
USE WHEN: You've sent the deposit invoice and it hasn't been paid
Hi [Client Name],
Just checking in on the deposit invoice I sent on [date] (£[amount], invoice #[number]). I want to make sure I can hold your start date of [date].
I've got another project enquiry for that slot, so if you could let me know either way by [date — 2-3 days out], I can keep your dates reserved.
If there's an issue with the invoice or payment method, happy to sort it — just let me know.
Thanks,
[Your Name]
Script 6: Retainer Setup — Monthly Payment Upfront
USE WHEN: Client wants ongoing work (set hours per month)
Hi [Client Name],
Following our conversation about an ongoing arrangement, here's what I'd suggest:
Retainer: [X] hours/month at £[rate]/hour = £[monthly total]/month
How it works:
• Monthly retainer is invoiced on the 1st of each month, due within 7 days
• Hours are used within the calendar month (unused hours don't roll over)
• Additional hours beyond the retainer are billed at £[rate]/hour
• Either party can end the retainer with 30 days' notice
The first month's retainer is payable upfront to secure the arrangement. This guarantees your hours in my schedule each month.
I'll send over a formal agreement if you'd like to go ahead. Happy to adjust the hours if [X]/month isn't quite right.
Best,
[Your Name]
Script 7: Politely Declining a No-Deposit Client
USE WHEN: Client pushes back hard on paying any deposit
Hi [Client Name],
I completely understand your position, and I appreciate you being upfront about it.
Unfortunately, I'm not able to begin work without a deposit — it's a standard part of how I operate and applies to all clients. It protects both of us: you get guaranteed dates in my calendar, and I can commit fully to your project without financial risk.
If 50% upfront doesn't work for you, I could offer a couple of alternatives:
• A smaller 25% deposit with the balance split across milestones
• Or a reduced first project (smaller scope, lower cost) so we can build a track record together
If neither of those works, no hard feelings at all — I'm happy to recommend some other [designers/developers/writers] who might be a better fit.
Let me know what you think.
Best,
[Your Name]
The Contract Clause to Back Up Your Emails
These emails work best when your contract already includes a deposit clause. Here's a template you can adapt:
Payment Terms: A deposit of [X]% of the total project fee is due before work commences. The deposit is non-refundable once work has begun. The remaining balance is due [on completion / per the milestone schedule attached]. Invoices are payable within [7/14/30] days. Late payments are subject to statutory interest at 8% above the Bank of England base rate, plus a fixed penalty of [£40/£70/£100] under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998.
For more on your legal rights when clients pay late, see our guide on charging statutory interest on late invoices.
Common Objections (And How to Handle Them)
"We don't usually pay deposits"
Your response: "I understand — many freelancers don't ask for them. I do, because it allows me to guarantee your dates and commit fully to your project. It's standard across all my clients."
"Can we pay on completion instead?"
Your response: "I'd normally require at least 25% upfront. If you'd prefer, we could do a smaller deposit with milestone payments — that way you're only paying for work you've reviewed and approved."
"Our accounts department only processes monthly"
Your response: "No problem — I can send the deposit invoice early so it fits your payment cycle. I'll just need it cleared before we start on [date]."
"We've never had a freelancer ask for this before"
Your response: "It's increasingly standard practice. It protects both of us — you get a committed start date, and I can plan my workload accordingly. Happy to walk you through the full payment schedule."
Want the Complete Payment Protection System?
Our Getting-Paid Toolkit includes deposit clause templates, invoice follow-up email sequences, late payment demand letters, and a step-by-step debt recovery guide. Everything you need to never chase an invoice again.
Get the Getting-Paid Toolkit — £19When to Use Each Script — Quick Reference
| Situation | Script # | Deposit Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Brand new client | Script 1 | 50% |
| Switching existing client to deposits | Script 2 | 25% |
| Large project (£5k+) | Script 3 | 25% + milestones |
| Rush job / tight deadline | Script 4 | 100% |
| Deposit invoice not paid yet | Script 5 | As quoted |
| Monthly retainer arrangement | Script 6 | First month upfront |
| Client refusing all deposits | Script 7 | Walk away (gracefully) |
The Mindset Shift
The biggest barrier to asking for deposits isn't the email — it's the fear that you'll lose the client. Here's the reality:
- Good clients expect it. Professional businesses understand deposits. The ones who push back hardest are often the ones who'd have paid late anyway.
- It's a filter, not a barrier. Requiring a deposit immediately weeds out time-wasters and clients who don't value your work.
- You're offering something in return. When you take a deposit, you're guaranteeing capacity in your schedule. That has genuine value.
- It changes the power dynamic. Once a client has paid a deposit, they're invested. They respond to emails faster, give feedback sooner, and treat the project more seriously.
For more on structuring your payments to prevent late invoices entirely, read our guide on creating a freelance deposit policy.
Complete Contract & Invoice Protection
Our Contract Template Pack includes deposit clauses, scope change policies, late payment terms, and kill fee provisions — all written for UK freelancers. Copy, customise, and send.
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