Payment default
The state of being in default for failing to pay a due debt, triggering interest and remedies.
Définition
Payment default arises when a debtor fails to pay a due monetary obligation and is in legal default (verzuim). Default may occur automatically once a fixed payment term lapses, or after a notice of default setting a final deadline. From the moment of default the creditor may claim statutory interest and, ultimately, collection costs and termination.
Exemple
Because the contract set a firm payment date, the buyer was automatically in default the day after that date passed without payment.
Pourquoi c'est un risque pour l'entreprise
Payment default across a portfolio of contracts can erode cash flow significantly before any individual case is escalated. The longer default goes undetected, the harder it is to recover accrued interest and collection costs, and the weaker the evidence base becomes for any later claim. Persistent late payers who are not chased on time gain an informal credit extension at the creditor's expense.
Comment le gérer
- Track payment due dates for every contract in a single system so overdue invoices are flagged promptly.
- Check whether the contract contains a fixed payment date (automatic default) or requires a notice of default before interest runs.
- Send a notice of default promptly where required, setting a clear and reasonable cure deadline.
- Document every step of the collection process in writing, as this record is essential if you later claim statutory interest, collection costs or termination.
- Decide early whether the counterparty is unable or unwilling to pay, since the remedies and commercial response differ.
Références juridiques
- BW 6:81 Dutch Civil Code: default and notice of default Droit néerlandais
- BW 6:83 Dutch Civil Code: default without notice Droit néerlandais
Sauf mention contraire, les références renvoient au droit néerlandais (Burgerlijk Wetboek, le Code civil néerlandais) ; les instruments de l'UE tels que le RGPD s'appliquent dans toute l'UE. Il s'agit d'informations générales, pas de conseils juridiques. D'autres juridictions traitent ces concepts différemment. Vérifiez le texte en vigueur et votre situation avec un avocat qualifié.
Foire aux questions
Questions courantes sur ce terme.