top of page

Debtor Ghosting You? Here’s How to Collect the Debt Fast And When to Hand It to Taurus Collections

  • Writer: Money Mentor
    Money Mentor
  • 21 hours ago
  • 5 min read

When a debtor goes quiet, it’s rarely “just busy”. It’s usually a decision to delay, avoid, or test whether you’ll keep pushing. And the longer you let it drag on, the harder it gets to collect.


Miniature house, contract with Korean text, calculator, and pen on a financial spreadsheet. Neutral, business-like setting.

Late payment is not a small-business nuisance in the UK. It’s a cash-flow killer. Over 1.5 million UK businesses are affected by late payments each year, with an estimated £26 billion tied up in late payments at any given time. If your debtor is ghosting you, your goal is simple: move from chasing to collecting, fast.


Below is a practical, step-by-step playbook you can use today, plus a clear point where it makes sense to hand the job to Taurus Collections Debt Collection Agency, focused on quick, professional recovery.


What “debtor ghosting” usually means

Ghosting typically falls into 1 of these buckets:

  • They are stalling for cash-flow reasons and paying whoever shouts loudest.

  • They are disputing the invoice informally but avoiding committing it in writing.

  • They think you will give up, discount, or write it off.

  • They are sliding toward insolvency and prioritising survival spending.

The key is to stop treating silence like a communication problem and start treating it like a collections process.


Step 1: Get your facts tight before you chase

Before you send another “just checking in” email, collect your evidence in 1 place:

  • The signed contract, purchase order, or written acceptance

  • The invoice and payment terms

  • Proof of delivery or completion (emails, job sheets, delivery notes)

  • The full statement of account

  • Any dispute emails or comments (even vague ones)

  • The debtor’s correct legal name and registered address

This matters because confidence wins. Wobble on the details and you give them room to wriggle.


Step 2: Stop being polite and start being clear

Polite chasing keeps you stuck in the maybe pile. Clarity moves you into the pay pile.

Use a message that is short, specific, and time-bound:

  • What is owed: £X

  • What it relates to: invoice number and date

  • What you need: payment today or a call today

  • What happens next: late payment action and escalation

Example (email or WhatsApp style):


You have an overdue balance of £[amount] for invoice [number], due on [date]. Please confirm today that payment will be made by [time]. If we do not hear from you, we will begin formal recovery action.

Keep it calm. No threats. Just consequences.


Step 3: Make contact harder to ignore

If you’re only emailing the accounts inbox, you’re easy to ignore. Go multi-channel in a controlled way:

  • Call accounts payable and ask for the exact payment run date

  • Call the buyer, contract manager, or director who benefits from your work

  • Send a letter to the registered office

  • If appropriate, send a final reminder by SMS or WhatsApp

You are not being awkward. You are protecting your business. Small businesses already spend an average of 86 hours chasing late payments. You cannot afford to donate that time. 


Step 4: Use a 7-day escalation ladder

Here’s a simple timeline that works well in the UK.

Day 1

Call. Follow up by email summarising what was said.

Day 3

Second call. Ask a yes or no question: Are you paying today, or do you need a payment plan?

Day 5

Send a Final Demand with a clear deadline (48 hours). Attach the invoice and statement.

Day 7

Issue a Letter Before Action (LBA). This is the line in the sand.

The mistake most businesses make is waiting 30 to 60 days before getting firm. By then, the debtor has trained you to accept delays.


Step 5: Add lawful pressure with interest and costs

In many business-to-business situations, you can claim statutory interest on late commercial payments at 8 percent above the Bank of England base rate, unless your contract specifies a different rate.


You may also be able to claim fixed late payment compensation depending on the size of the debt (under UK late payment rules). This is not about being punitive. It’s about signalling that delaying payment gets more expensive, not less.

If you’re unsure what applies in your case, you can still do the most important thing: put the debtor on notice that you will add interest and recovery costs where legally permitted.


Step 6: Neutralise the “fake dispute” tactic

Ghosting often comes with a last-minute line like: “We had issues with the service.”

Your response should be simple:

  • Ask for the dispute in writing within 24 hours

  • Ask for specific details: dates, evidence, what they want

  • Confirm the undisputed amount is due now


Example:

If you are disputing the invoice, please set out the exact reasons in writing within 24 hours, including evidence. Any undisputed amount remains payable immediately.

This stops vague objections becoming a permanent excuse.


When to hand it to Taurus Collections

You do not need to chase forever. In fact, you shouldn’t.

As a rule, consider handing it over when:

  • The invoice is 14 to 21 days overdue and communication has gone quiet

  • You’ve chased 3 times with no firm payment date

  • The debtor promises payment, then breaks the promise

  • You’re spending more time chasing than the profit is worth

  • You suspect the debtor is paying others first

  • You want to preserve the relationship by keeping emotion out of it


This is where Taurus Collections fits neatly: you stop being “the supplier who keeps asking” and the situation becomes “a formal recovery process”. Taurus Collections positions itself as a UK-wide debt collection company with fast recovery and options like No Win No Fee and outsourced credit control, which is useful when you want results without building an internal collections function.


Why escalation works faster when a professional steps in


A debtor can ignore you because there’s no immediate consequence. Professional collections changes the psychology:


  • Your request becomes a demand with structure and deadlines

  • Communication is logged, consistent, and persistent

  • The debtor realises you are prepared to take the next step

And crucially, it protects your headspace. Late payments are estimated to cost the UK economy almost £11 billion per year, and thousands of businesses close each year because of overdue invoices. You cannot treat this like an admin. It’s survival.


Next steps

If a debtor is ghosting you, you do not need more patience. You need a tighter process.

Get your documents straight, set firm deadlines, switch channels, issue an LBA, and add interest and costs where applicable. If you hit silence, broken promises, or endless excuses, hand it to Taurus Collections so you can focus on running your business while the recovery is handled properly.



Related Content




 
 
bottom of page