Invoicing

How to Invoice International Clients as a UK Freelancer (Complete Guide 2026)

Published 21 February 2026 · 14 min read

Your first international client feels like a milestone. A US startup, a German agency, an Australian consultancy — suddenly you're earning in dollars, euros, or AUD. Exciting, right?

Then the invoice part arrives. What currency do you use? Do you charge VAT? How do you actually get the money into your UK bank account without losing a fortune in fees? And what does HMRC expect you to report?

International invoicing isn't complicated once you understand the rules. But getting it wrong can mean losing hundreds of pounds per payment in unnecessary fees, making VAT errors that HMRC will query, or simply confusing your client so badly they delay payment.

Here's the complete guide for UK freelancers invoicing international clients.

Step 1: Decide Which Currency to Invoice In

This is the first question every freelancer with an overseas client faces. You have three options:

Option A: Invoice in GBP

Pros: You know exactly what you'll receive. No exchange rate risk. Simple bookkeeping.

Cons: The client has to figure out the conversion. Some clients find this inconvenient or confusing. If the exchange rate moves against them between receiving and paying, they might feel they're overpaying.

Option B: Invoice in the Client's Currency

Pros: Frictionless for the client — they see a familiar number and pay it. Professional. Removes a barrier to payment.

Cons: You bear the exchange rate risk. The amount you receive in GBP depends on the rate on the day of conversion. Bookkeeping is slightly more complex (you need to record the GBP equivalent).

Option C: Quote in GBP, Invoice in Their Currency

Pros: You negotiate in GBP (so you know your rate), then convert to the client's currency at the point of invoicing. Best of both worlds.

Cons: Requires you to state the exchange rate used on the invoice. If there's a significant delay between quoting and invoicing, the rate may have moved.

Our recommendation: For most freelancers, Option B (invoicing in the client's currency) is the best default. It makes payment as easy as possible for the client — and easy payment means faster payment. The exchange rate risk is usually minimal for invoices paid within 14-30 days. Use Wise to convert at the best available rate.

Step 2: Understand the VAT Rules

VAT on international services is one of the most misunderstood areas of freelance tax. Here's the simplified version:

If You're NOT VAT-Registered

You don't charge VAT on any invoices — domestic or international. However, you should know that services to overseas customers do not count toward your UK VAT registration threshold (currently £90,000). Only UK supplies count. This is important because it means international income won't push you into compulsory VAT registration.

If You ARE VAT-Registered

For services supplied to businesses outside the UK (B2B), the general rule is:

For services supplied to consumers outside the UK (B2C), the rules depend on the type of service. For most professional services (design, writing, consulting, development), the place of supply is still where the customer is, so no UK VAT applies. But for some specific service types, different rules apply.

When in doubt about VAT on international services, check HMRC's "place of supply" guidance or consult your accountant. Getting this wrong can mean charging VAT you shouldn't (and having to refund it) or not charging VAT you should (and owing HMRC money).

Step 3: Set Up the Right Payment Method

This is where many freelancers lose significant money. Traditional international bank transfers (SWIFT) typically cost:

On a $5,000 invoice, you could lose $200-350 in total costs. That's 4-7% — an unacceptable tax on your earnings.

The Better Way: Wise

Wise (formerly TransferWise) solves this problem entirely. Here's how it works for freelancers:

  1. Sign up for a Wise Business account (free to open)
  2. Get local bank details in USD, EUR, AUD, CAD, SGD, and more
  3. Put these local details on your invoice — your US client pays to a US account number, your EU client pays to a European IBAN
  4. The client pays locally — no international wire fees for them
  5. Wise converts to GBP at the mid-market rate with a small, transparent fee (typically 0.3-0.7%)
  6. GBP arrives in your UK bank account within 1-2 business days

The total cost on a $5,000 invoice via Wise is typically £15-25. Compare that to $200-350 via traditional banking. Over a year of international work, the savings are enormous.

Alternative: PayPal

PayPal works for international payments but is significantly more expensive: 2.9% + 30p per transaction, plus a 1.5% currency conversion fee. On $5,000, that's approximately $220 in fees (about £175). Almost as expensive as a traditional bank wire, and with the added risk of buyer disputes and account holds.

Use PayPal only when the client specifically requests it and won't use any other method. For a full comparison, see our payment methods comparison.

Step 4: Structure Your International Invoice

An international invoice needs everything a domestic invoice needs, plus a few extras:

📋 International Invoice Checklist

Step 5: Handle Exchange Rate Fluctuations

If you invoice in a foreign currency, the exchange rate between invoicing and payment may change. For HMRC reporting, you need to record the GBP equivalent of each foreign currency payment. Here's how to handle this:

Option 1: Convert on Receipt

When the payment arrives, convert it to GBP immediately (either via Wise or your bank). Record the GBP amount received. This is the simplest approach and the one most sole traders use.

Option 2: HMRC's Published Rates

HMRC publishes monthly exchange rates that you can use for your tax return. This is an alternative to using the actual rate you received — useful if you hold foreign currency for a while before converting.

Option 3: Hold and Convert Strategically

With a Wise multi-currency account, you can hold USD, EUR, or other currencies and convert when rates are favourable. This gives you some control over exchange rate risk, but adds complexity to your bookkeeping. If you're receiving large amounts (£5,000+ per month) in foreign currency, it's worth the effort.

Protecting Against Rate Swings

For larger projects with long payment terms:

Step 6: Tax Reporting for International Income

All foreign income from freelancing is reportable on your UK self-assessment tax return. Here's what you need to know:

For more on freelancer tax, see our guide on freelancer tax deductions.

Common International Invoicing Mistakes

The Practical Setup: What You Need

Here's the minimal setup for any UK freelancer working with international clients:

  1. Wise Business account: For receiving payments in foreign currencies at the best rates. Free to open.
  2. Invoicing software that handles multiple currencies: Most invoicing tools support this. Or use our free invoice generator.
  3. A contract template with international clauses: Governing law, payment currency, exchange rate terms, and payment method. Our contract guide covers the essentials.
  4. A bookkeeping system that tracks foreign currency: Even a simple spreadsheet works — just record the foreign amount, GBP equivalent, and exchange rate for each transaction.
International clients are often the most lucrative — USD and EUR rates are frequently higher than UK rates for the same work. Don't let bad invoicing practices eat into those premium earnings.

Invoice Templates That Work Internationally

The Getting-Paid Toolkit includes multi-currency invoice templates, international payment terms clauses, and VAT note templates for overseas clients.

Get the Toolkit — £19 →

Frequently Asked Questions

Should UK freelancers invoice in GBP or the client's currency?

It depends on your preference. Invoicing in the client's currency (e.g., USD or EUR) makes it easier for them to pay and removes currency confusion. However, you bear the exchange rate risk. Invoicing in GBP gives you certainty but may cause friction for the client. Many freelancers invoice in the client's currency for the convenience factor, then use Wise to convert at the best available rate.

Do UK freelancers charge VAT on international invoices?

For services supplied to businesses outside the UK, the 'place of supply' is generally where the customer is based. This means the supply is outside the scope of UK VAT — you don't charge VAT. However, you must still include the supply on your VAT return (in Box 6). For services to consumers outside the UK, the rules vary by service type. Always check the latest HMRC guidance or consult an accountant.

What is the cheapest way for UK freelancers to receive international payments?

Wise (formerly TransferWise) is typically the cheapest option for international payments. You get local bank details in USD, EUR, AUD, and other currencies, so clients pay locally. Wise converts at the mid-market exchange rate with a small transparent fee (usually 0.3-0.7%). This is significantly cheaper than PayPal (4.4%+) or traditional bank wires (£15-25 per transfer plus poor exchange rates).

How do UK freelancers report foreign income on their tax return?

Foreign income from freelancing is reported on your self-assessment tax return just like UK income — it goes in the self-employment section. You must convert foreign currency amounts to GBP using HMRC's approved exchange rates for the relevant period. The income is taxable in the UK regardless of where the client is based.

Can UK freelancers use the Late Payment Act for international invoices?

The Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998 applies to contracts governed by English law. If your contract with an overseas client is governed by English law (which you can specify), you can claim statutory interest. If the contract is governed by the client's local law, you'd need to check their jurisdiction's equivalent legislation. Always include late payment terms in your contract regardless.