A payment request link is the fastest legal way to ask one specific person to pay one specific amount. You enter who owes you, how much, and what for; the platform produces a URL; you send it; the recipient clicks, picks a payment method, and pays. The whole loop takes minutes — not the 23 days a traditional invoice averages before it gets settled.
This guide covers what a payment request link actually is (and how it differs from a generic payment link), when to use one, how to create one in five steps, the payment methods that should be on it in 2026, and the workflows where it consistently beats a PDF invoice. It pairs with our complete payment-links guide, the free payment link walkthrough, and the how-to-send-a-pay-request post.
Key Takeaways
- A payment request link is a targeted URL tied to one customer, one amount, and one due date — not a generic checkout page
- Recipients pay in a single click; senders get notified the moment the payment lands
- Payment request links are paid in ~3 days on average versus ~23 days for traditional PDF invoices
- They support cards, iDEAL, SEPA, PayPal, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Bancontact, and Klarna out of the box
- Use them for freelance fees, agency retainers, deposits, group payments, and B2B invoices — not for public sales pages
- A good platform turns the link into a full billing record: PDF invoice, reminders, customer portal access, and bank reconciliation
What is a Payment Request Link?
A payment request link is a unique URL generated by a billing platform that tells one specific person to pay a specific amount. The sender configures the request — recipient name, amount, currency, description, due date — and the platform returns a link like `pay.example.com/r/abc123`. The recipient opens it on any device, sees a hosted checkout page with the request details pre-filled, picks a payment method, and pays.
What makes it a *payment request link* (as opposed to a generic payment link) is the targeting. The link is tied to a specific customer record. The amount is fixed. The platform tracks whether *that one person* paid, sends reminders if they don't, and updates the invoice status automatically when they do. There's no anonymous "pay what you want" page; there's a clear bill, a clear due date, and a clear paid-or-not status.
In practice, a payment request link replaces three older workflows in one move: the PDF invoice attached to an email, the IBAN-and-reference manual bank transfer, and the back-and-forth "did you get my invoice yet?" follow-ups.
Payment Request Link vs Payment Link vs Invoice
The three terms get mixed up constantly. Here's the practical difference:
| Use case | Payment link | Payment request link | Invoice (PDF) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Targeted at one person | No (anyone can pay) | Yes | Yes |
| Fixed amount | Optional | Yes | Yes |
| Tracks who paid | No | Yes | Manually |
| Sent via email/SMS/WhatsApp | Yes | Yes | Email attachment |
| Reminders if unpaid | No (per link) | Yes (automated) | Manual |
| Best for | Public products, sales pages | Client invoices, deposits, retainers | Compliance archive |
| Average days to payment | Variable | ~3 days | ~23 days |
The short version: payment links are a checkout, payment request links are a bill. If you're selling a course, use a payment link. If you're invoicing a client for €4,200 of consulting, use a payment request link. If you need to keep a tax-compliant record, generate the PDF invoice alongside (modern platforms do both automatically).
When to Use a Payment Request Link
The payment request pattern wins whenever you know exactly who owes you, exactly how much, and you want to remove every step of friction between "you owe me" and "you paid me."
You finished a project. The client agreed on €1,800. Instead of attaching a PDF invoice and waiting two weeks, you send a payment request link via email. They click it, pick PayPal or card, and pay before they close the email tab. The PDF invoice is auto-generated for their accountant, but the payment itself is a single click. See our payment links for freelancers breakdown for the workflow.
Variable retainers — €4,200 in May, €3,800 in June, €5,100 in July — don't fit Stripe's product-based subscription model. A payment request link generated each cycle handles this cleanly: the amount changes, the customer record stays, the saved payment method auto-charges if you've enabled it. PayRequest treats every invoice as variable from the start.
Hotels, equipment rentals, and event venues often need to *hold* an amount on a card without capturing it immediately. A payment request link routed through a provider that supports pre-authorization (Mollie supports 1–28 days; Stripe supports 7 by default, 30 with Extended Auth on select brands) turns this into a one-click flow. See our collect security deposit online post for the full pattern.
Five friends owe €23 each for a dinner. A teacher collects €15 per student for a school trip. A wedding planner splits a venue deposit across two payers. A single shareable payment request link, copied into a group chat, handles all three — each person clicks, pays their share, and the system tracks the partial-payment state.
You quote a custom amount that doesn't fit any standard product. Instead of building a Stripe product object for a one-time use case, you create a payment request link with the exact amount and description. The link expires after payment or after a configurable window — no clutter in your dashboard.
How to Create a Payment Request Link in 5 Steps
The flow below assumes you're using a hosted billing platform like PayRequest. The same five steps map to most modern alternatives.
Create an account on the platform. Connect your existing Stripe, Mollie, or PayPal account via OAuth (no API keys, no copying secrets). The connection takes about 3 minutes and your money still settles in the connected provider — the platform sits on top, not in front.
Click "New payment request" and fill in the form: customer name and email, amount, currency, description (this becomes the line item on the auto-generated invoice), and due date. Optionally attach files, set a request-expiry window, or toggle pre-authorization for deposits.
Select which methods to show on the checkout page. For European B2B, the typical mix is iDEAL + SEPA + Bancontact + cards + PayPal. For consumer-facing requests, add Apple Pay, Google Pay, and Klarna. The platform routes each method through the right processor automatically (cards via Stripe, iDEAL via Mollie, PayPal via PayPal).
Send the link by email, SMS, WhatsApp, or any channel. PayRequest can send the email for you (with branded template, logo, and message), or just give you the URL to paste into your own email/CRM. The same link works on every channel and every device.
The dashboard shows real-time status: opened, partially paid, paid, refunded. Reminders fire automatically on the cadence you set (e.g., 2 days before due, on due, +3 days, +7 days). When the customer pays, the matching PDF invoice updates to "paid", the bank reconciliation matches the incoming SEPA transfer, and you get a notification.
Payment Methods Your Link Should Accept in 2026
A payment request link is only as good as the methods it offers. The right mix depends on your customers, but the 2026 baseline for European businesses is:
- Cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex) — the universal fallback, ~2.9% + €0.30 average fee
- iDEAL — 60%+ of Dutch online payments, €0.29 flat fee per transaction
- Bancontact — 80%+ of Belgian online payments
- SEPA Direct Debit — €0.20 per transaction, ideal for B2B and recurring billing
- Apple Pay / Google Pay — same fees as cards, dramatically higher mobile conversion
- PayPal — useful for international consumers, includes PayPal balance
- Klarna / Pay Later — boosts conversion on consumer purchases over €100
For a deeper look at which providers offer which methods, see our payment providers comparison.
Payment Request Link Examples by Industry
The pattern holds across very different businesses. A few real configurations:
Amount: €2,400. Methods: card + SEPA + PayPal. Description: "Brand identity package — final installment". Link sent by email, paid in 2 days. The PDF invoice is auto-archived for the designer's bookkeeping export.
Each client gets a recurring payment request link with a per-client custom amount (some have add-ons, some don't). Auto-charge runs on the saved payment method on the 1st; failures trigger the dunning flow, which retries on day 3, day 7, and day 14 before pausing the service.
A €500 pre-authorization payment request link routed through Mollie holds the amount on the renter's card for 14 days. If the equipment comes back undamaged, the platform releases the hold; if not, the company captures the agreed amount. No physical card swipes, no in-person paperwork.
The coach sends a single payment request link for €960 covering 12 sessions. The customer pays in one click; access to the booking calendar opens automatically. For monthly memberships, the same flow runs as a recurring request — see how to sell memberships online.
How PayRequest Handles Payment Request Links
PayRequest is built around the payment request pattern. Every link is tied to a customer record, generates a matching PDF invoice automatically, and passes through the customer portal so the recipient can see their full invoice history later — not just the single request you sent today.
Specifically, PayRequest's payment requests feature bundles:
- Multi-provider checkout — Stripe, Mollie, and PayPal on one link, with the customer picking their preferred method
- Auto-generated invoices — every request produces a tax-compliant PDF, archived in the portal
- Multi-channel reminders — email, SMS, and WhatsApp on a configurable cadence (no separate dunning tool needed)
- Bank reconciliation — incoming SEPA and bank transfers auto-match to open requests, no manual lookup
- Recurring requests — set a request to repeat weekly, monthly, or yearly, with variable amounts allowed
- Deposits and pre-auth — routed through Mollie when longer holds are required
- File delivery — for digital products, the file unlocks the moment the link is paid
All of this sits on top of your existing payment provider — money still settles in Stripe (or Mollie, or PayPal). The platform is €20/month flat with everything included.
Frequently Asked Questions
The questions below are pulled from real PayRequest support tickets and "People Also Ask" data on payment-request-link queries.
Get Paid Faster, Without the Friction
A payment request link replaces three older patterns — the PDF invoice attachment, the manual IBAN+reference bank transfer, and the "did you receive my invoice?" follow-up email — with a single URL the recipient clicks once. The average payment time drops from 23 days to 3 days, the reconciliation work drops to zero, and the customer experience goes from confusing to one-click.
If you're sending invoices and waiting weeks to get paid, try PayRequest free. Connect your Stripe, Mollie, or PayPal account in 3 minutes — the first payment request link can be sent in five. For deeper reading, see our complete payment-links guide, the free payment link walkthrough, and the how-to-send-a-pay-request breakdown.
