Payment Link vs Invoice: When to Use Each
Should you send a payment link or a full invoice? The answer depends on who you're billing, what for, and how fast you need to get paid. Here's a clear decision framework for every scenario.
- Payment links get paid in 2-3 days on average; invoices take 23-30 days.
- Use a payment link for speed and simplicity; use an invoice for B2B formality and VAT compliance.
- Best approach for most businesses: send a payment link first, generate an invoice retroactively.
- Neither is right for recurring billing — use subscriptions with automated dunning instead.
Payment link vs invoice: side-by-side comparison
Every difference that matters when deciding which to send.
| Feature | Payment Link | Invoice |
|---|---|---|
| Time to get paid | 2-3 days average | 23-30 days average |
| Setup time | 30 seconds | 2-5 minutes |
| Line items | Simple description only | Multiple line items with quantities |
| VAT / Tax breakdown | Total with tax (no breakdown) | Full tax breakdown per line |
| Invoice number | No invoice number | Sequential invoice numbering |
| Payment methods | Cards, iDEAL, SEPA, Apple Pay, PayPal | Bank transfer (IBAN) or payment link attached |
| Automatic reminders | Built-in (auto-stop on payment) | Manual or add-on tool |
| Payment terms | Pay now (instant) | Net 7, Net 30, Net 60 |
| Customer experience | One-click checkout | Open email, read, open banking app, type IBAN |
| Mobile friendly | Optimized for mobile | PDF can be hard to read on phone |
| Accounting / bookkeeping | Receipt only | Full accounting document |
| Best for | Speed, simplicity, one-off charges | Formality, B2B, VAT compliance |
When to send each one
Real scenarios and which format wins.
Speed matters. Get the deposit in hours, not weeks.
Client needs line items, VAT, and a paper trail for their finance team.
Customer wants to buy now with one click — no friction.
Neither manual link nor invoice — use recurring billing with dunning.
Get paid fast for the first deliverable, then formalize for ongoing work.
Attendees want to register and pay in under 30 seconds.
Enterprise procurement requires PO numbers, Net 30, and formal documentation.
Donors want a quick way to contribute without creating an account.
Automate monthly charges with failed-payment retry logic.
Client books and pays in one flow — no invoicing overhead.
Why payment links get paid faster
The psychology and mechanics behind the speed advantage.
Zero friction
A payment link takes the customer from message to checkout in one tap. No logging into a banking portal, no typing IBANs, no finding the right invoice PDF. Each extra step drops conversion by 10-20%.
Multiple payment methods
Payment links can offer cards, iDEAL, SEPA, Apple Pay, Google Pay, and PayPal — whatever the customer prefers. Invoices with IBAN force bank transfer only, which adds 1-5 business days.
Automatic reminders
Payment link tools like PayRequest send follow-up reminders automatically and stop the moment payment lands. Chasing invoice payments manually takes hours per month and is easily forgotten.
Mobile-first checkout
Most invoice PDFs are painful to read on a phone. Payment links are optimized for mobile checkout — critical when 60%+ of business emails are opened on mobile devices.
Can you use both together?
Absolutely — and combining them is often the smartest approach.
The most efficient billing workflow for most businesses is simple: send a payment link first for speed, generate an invoice retroactively for the books.
Platforms like PayRequest support this directly. Create a payment request, share the link, and the moment the customer pays, upgrade it to a full invoice with line items, VAT, and an invoice number — all from the same dashboard. Your customer gets the speed of a one-click checkout, and your accountant gets the paper trail they need.
This hybrid approach works for 80% of billing scenarios. The exceptions: enterprise contracts (start with an invoice for procurement), subscriptions (use recurring billing), and very small transactions under €10 (payment link only, no invoice needed).
FAQ
What's the difference between a payment link and an invoice?
+
A payment link is a URL that takes a customer directly to a checkout page. An invoice is a formal billing document with line items, VAT, an invoice number, and payment terms. Payment links get paid faster; invoices provide the accounting paper trail.
When should I send a payment link instead of an invoice?
+
Send a payment link when speed matters: deposits, milestones, one-off services, tips, donations, digital products. The simpler and more urgent the charge, the stronger the case for a payment link over an invoice.
Can I use both payment links and invoices together?
+
Yes. Send a payment link first for speed, then generate a formal invoice retroactively. PayRequest lets you upgrade a paid payment request into a full invoice with one click.
Do payment links support VAT?
+
Yes, modern payment link tools can include VAT and generate tax-compliant receipts. But if you need line-item VAT breakdowns for your customer's accounting department, a full invoice is the right format.
Are payment links less professional than invoices?
+
No. Branded payment links with your logo, colors, and custom domain look more professional than a PDF attachment. The professionalism comes from branding, not format.
Which is better for recurring billing?
+
Neither — use subscription billing with automated dunning. Payment links are one-time. Invoices can repeat but require manual effort. Subscriptions handle the full cycle automatically.
Do payment links work for B2B clients?
+
Yes for smaller transactions under €1,000. For enterprise B2B with PO numbers and Net 30 terms, send a formal invoice. Many B2B businesses use both: link for speed, invoice for compliance.
Related guides
Send payment links and invoices from one dashboard
PayRequest does both. Create a payment link in 30 seconds, send it by email/SMS/WhatsApp, and upgrade paid requests to full invoices — all free to start.