How to Invoice as a Sole Trader in the UK: The Complete Guide
You've done the work. Now you need to get paid. But if you're new to self-employment — or you've been winging it with scrappy invoices for years — you might not be sure what a proper sole trader invoice actually needs to include. This guide covers everything: HMRC requirements, VAT rules, payment terms, numbering systems, and the mistakes that cost you money.
Do Sole Traders Actually Need to Issue Invoices?
Technically, you're only legally required to issue invoices if you're VAT-registered. But practically? Yes, you absolutely need to invoice. Every time.
Here's why. HMRC expects sole traders to keep accurate records of all business income and expenses. An invoice is the cleanest, simplest way to do that. It creates a paper trail that proves what you earned, when you earned it, and who paid you. Without that trail, you're making your Self Assessment (or Making Tax Digital returns from April 2026) significantly harder than it needs to be.
Beyond tax compliance, invoices are how you get paid professionally. A client who receives a proper, well-structured invoice treats you like a business. A client who receives a casual WhatsApp message saying "can you send over £500 when you get a chance?" treats you like a mate doing them a favour.
The difference matters — especially when it comes to chasing late payments.
What a Sole Trader Invoice Must Include
HMRC doesn't prescribe an exact layout, but your invoice needs to contain specific information. Miss any of these and you risk payment delays, client queries, or problems during a tax inspection.
Here's the complete list:
- Your full name (or business/trading name) and your address
- The client's name and address
- A unique invoice number — sequential and never repeated
- The invoice date — the date you issue it
- The supply date — when the work was delivered (if different from the invoice date)
- A clear description of the goods or services you provided
- The total amount due
- Your payment terms — when you expect to be paid (e.g., NET 14)
- Your payment details — bank account, sort code, and/or a payment link
What about your UTR number?
Your Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR) is between you and HMRC. You do not need to put it on your invoices, and in most cases you shouldn't — it's sensitive information that clients don't need.
The exception? Some agencies and larger companies may ask for your UTR to verify your self-employment status. In that case, provide it separately — not on every invoice you send.
A practical example
Invoice #2026-003
From: Jane Smith, 14 Oak Lane, Bristol BS1 4QA
To: Acme Design Ltd, 7 Finsbury Square, London EC2A 1AE
Date: 21 February 2026 | Due: 7 March 2026 (NET 14)
Brand strategy workshop (half day) — £800.00
Logo design & 3 revisions — £650.00
Brand guidelines PDF — £550.00
Total: £2,000.00
Pay by bank transfer: J Smith / 20-45-67 / 12345678
Clean. Itemised. No ambiguity. That's the standard you're aiming for. Need a template? Our free invoice generator builds one in 60 seconds.
VAT: When You Need It and What Changes
If your taxable turnover is below the VAT registration threshold — £90,000 for the 2025/26 tax year — you don't need to register for VAT, and you must not charge VAT on your invoices.
This is important: some sole traders think adding VAT makes them look more "professional." It doesn't. If you charge VAT without being registered, you're breaking the law and confusing your clients.
If you are VAT-registered (or need to register because you've crossed the threshold), your invoices must include additional information:
- Your VAT registration number
- The VAT rate charged on each item
- The VAT amount for each item
- The total excluding VAT, the total VAT, and the total including VAT
There are also simplified VAT invoice rules for invoices under £250, where you can show VAT-inclusive prices. But for most freelancers and sole traders, a standard VAT invoice is what you'll need.
How to Number Your Invoices
HMRC requires each invoice to have a unique, sequential number. But they don't specify the format — that's up to you. The key rules:
- Never repeat a number. Every invoice must be uniquely identifiable.
- Keep them sequential. They should follow a logical order so there are no unexplained gaps.
- Be consistent. Pick a format and stick with it.
Common formats that work well:
- Year-based: 2026-001, 2026-002, 2026-003… (resets each year)
- Simple sequential: INV-001, INV-002, INV-003…
- Client-coded: ACME-001, ACME-002… (useful if you have a few regular clients)
Avoid starting at INV-001 if you want to look established — there's no rule saying you can't start at INV-100 or 2026-050. Just keep the sequence going from wherever you begin.
Choosing the Right Payment Terms
Your payment terms tell the client when you expect to be paid. This is non-negotiable information — every invoice needs them. Vague terms like "payment due upon receipt" sound professional but give clients zero deadline.
The most common options for sole traders:
- Due on receipt — immediate payment (good for small one-off jobs)
- NET 7 — payment within 7 days (good for retainer/repeat clients)
- NET 14 — payment within 14 days (the freelancer sweet spot)
- NET 30 — payment within 30 days (only if the client's accounts team requires it)
For a deeper comparison and help choosing, read our guide on Net 30 vs Net 60 payment terms, or use our payment terms generator to build custom clauses for your contracts.
Whatever you choose, put your payment terms on the invoice and in your contract. Repetition creates expectation.
How to Send Your Invoice (And When)
The golden rule: invoice the same day you deliver the work. Every day you delay is a day added to your payment timeline. If you deliver on the 1st but invoice on the 5th with NET 14 terms, you won't see money until the 19th at the earliest.
Best practices for sending:
- Always send as a PDF. Not a Word doc, not a screenshot, not body text in an email. PDFs look professional, can't be accidentally edited, and are easy for accounts teams to file.
- Email it directly to the person who handles payment — this might be your main contact, but it could also be an accounts@ or finance@ address. Ask upfront who handles invoices.
- Include a brief, clear email. Something like: "Hi [Name], please find attached invoice #2026-003 for £2,000, due 7 March. Payment details are on the invoice. Let me know if you need anything else."
- Keep a copy. Every invoice you send should be saved — either in your accounting software or a dedicated folder.
For larger projects, don't wait until the end to invoice. Break the work into milestone payments — 25-50% upfront, progress payments at key stages, and a final payment on delivery. This keeps cash flowing and reduces your risk.
What to Do When Clients Don't Pay
You've sent a proper invoice. The due date has passed. The money hasn't arrived. What now?
Step 1: Follow up on day one. Don't wait a week hoping they'll remember. Send a short, factual email the day after the due date: "Hi [Name], just flagging that invoice #2026-003 was due yesterday. Could you let me know when I can expect payment?"
Step 2: Escalate with a formal reminder. If payment doesn't arrive within 7 days of the due date, send a firmer reminder. Attach the original invoice again. Mention your late payment terms if you have them.
Step 3: Know your legal rights. Under the Late Payment of Commercial Debts (Interest) Act 1998, you can charge statutory interest of 8% plus the Bank of England base rate on overdue invoices, plus fixed compensation of £40–£100. You don't need to enforce this to benefit from it — the mere presence of a late fee clause changes client behaviour.
For the complete escalation playbook, from gentle nudge to legal action, read our guide on what to do when a client won't pay your invoice.
Making Tax Digital: What Changes in 2026
From April 2026, Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD ITSA) kicks in for sole traders and landlords with income above £50,000. This is a significant change that affects how you keep records — but it doesn't fundamentally change what goes on your invoices.
Here's what MTD means for your invoicing:
- Digital records are mandatory. You'll need MTD-compatible software to record income and expenses — no more shoeboxes of receipts or basic spreadsheets.
- Quarterly updates. Instead of one big annual Self Assessment, you'll submit summary updates to HMRC every quarter.
- Your invoices stay the same. The content requirements for invoices don't change under MTD. What changes is how you record and report the information behind them.
If your income is between £30,000 and £50,000, you'll need to comply from April 2027. Below £30,000, there's no confirmed date yet — but switching to digital record-keeping now means you won't be scrambling later.
The practical takeaway: if you're still invoicing from a Word template and tracking payments in your head, now is the time to move to proper invoicing software. It'll make MTD compliance almost automatic.
5 Invoicing Mistakes That Cost Sole Traders Money
1. Not including payment details
You'd be amazed how many sole traders send invoices that say "£1,500 due in 14 days" but don't tell the client how to pay. Always include your bank details and/or a payment link. The fewer steps between "opening the invoice" and "sending the money," the faster you get paid. For more on this, see our 11 invoice best practices.
2. Using vague descriptions
"Consulting services — £3,000" invites questions. "Brand strategy workshop (half day) — £800 / Logo design & 3 revisions — £650 / Brand guidelines PDF — £550" doesn't. Itemised invoices get paid faster because they don't raise queries.
3. Invoicing late
Every day you delay sending your invoice is a day added to your wait. Deliver the work, send the invoice. Same day.
4. Not having a late fee clause
A simple line on your invoice — "Invoices not paid within [X] days will incur interest at 8% + BoE base rate per annum" — changes client behaviour even if you never enforce it. Learn how in our guide to adding late fees.
5. Forgetting to follow up
The number one reason invoices go unpaid isn't malice — it's that the client forgot. Set up automated reminders or build a manual follow-up system. Either way, don't rely on hope.
Your Sole Trader Invoice Checklist
Before you send any invoice, run through this quick checklist:
- ✅ Your name/trading name and address
- ✅ Client's name and address
- ✅ Unique, sequential invoice number
- ✅ Invoice date and supply date
- ✅ Clear, itemised description of work
- ✅ Total amount due
- ✅ Payment terms (NET 14, NET 30, etc.)
- ✅ Bank details and/or payment link
- ✅ Late payment clause
- ✅ VAT details (if VAT-registered only)
- ✅ PO number (if client requires one)
- ✅ Sent as PDF
If you tick every box, you've created a professional invoice that meets HMRC requirements, makes it easy for clients to pay, and protects you if anything goes wrong.
Need a template that handles all of this? Our free invoice generator builds a clean, professional invoice in under a minute.
📦 The Freelancer Getting-Paid Toolkit — £19
37 email templates, 10 legal-grade contract clauses, and a complete escalation system. Everything a sole trader needs to invoice professionally, set proper payment terms, and chase overdue payments without the awkwardness.
Get the Toolkit →Instant download. Use it forever.
—
Written by the team at Landolio — tools and templates for freelancers who'd rather do great work than chase payments.