Shipmnts Blog

How to Reduce DSO Below 45 Days in Freight Forwarding

Written by Shipmnts Editorial Team | Jun 13, 2026 3:56:49 AM

Quick: what is your average Days Sales Outstanding right now? Most freight forwarders can quote spot rates to the nearest dollar but go blank when asked their DSO. That gap — between operational expertise and financial visibility — is one of the most expensive blind spots in the forwarding business.

The average DSO in freight forwarding sits between 55 and 75 days. On a ₹10 crore annual turnover, that's roughly ₹1.5–2 crore permanently floating in your debtors ledger, funded by an overdraft you're paying 12–14% interest on. The margin you worked to earn on each shipment quietly funds your clients' cash flow instead of your own.

Getting below 45 days is achievable without chasing clients aggressively or upending long-standing relationships. Almost all of the fix sits in operational and billing processes — problems that cause delays before money even reaches the collections stage.

Why Freight Forwarding Has a DSO Problem Other Service Businesses Don't

Consulting firms and IT services companies with simple invoices typically collect in 30–45 days. Freight forwarding structurally fights against this for four reasons:

  • Complex invoices with 8–15 line items. Origin charges, ocean or air freight, destination handling, customs duties, trucking, and miscellaneous disbursements — each a potential dispute point. Any single disputed line can hold the entire invoice.
  • Advance cost exposure before billing. You pay carriers, terminals, CHAs, and truckers before you invoice the client. The gap between outflow and collection is your working capital drain.
  • Late billing after job closure. Many forwarders wait until a shipment is fully closed — all destination charges reconciled, every cost booked — before sending an invoice. On an FCL shipment with a 30-day transit, that can mean billing 6–8 weeks after the cargo moved.
  • Client approval cycles. Mid-size importers route invoices through accounts teams that have nothing to do with operations. A missing document or mismatched PO number resets the payment clock.

None of these are inevitable. They are process problems with process solutions.

The Fastest Win: Bill at Departure, Not at Closure

The single biggest lever most forwarders have is billing cycle time — the gap between a shipment departing and the invoice going out. Industry average: 12–18 days. Best-in-class: 2–3 days.

The practical fix is a two-pass invoicing approach:

  1. Issue a preliminary invoice at departure covering confirmed costs — freight, origin charges, and known destination charges. Get it to the client within 48 hours of departure.
  2. Issue a final reconciliation invoice for any cost variance once all destination charges confirm — typically within 5–7 days of delivery.

Most clients are comfortable with this. What they are not comfortable with is receiving an invoice six weeks after their goods arrived in the warehouse.

Fix Invoice Quality Before You Fix Collections

Disputed invoices are the single biggest cause of payment delays in freight. A client with no dispute pays on terms. A client with a legitimate question stops the payment clock entirely, sometimes for weeks.

Dispute rates on manually prepared freight invoices typically run 15–25% in SME forwarding operations. Each dispute that takes 10 days to resolve adds 10+ days to effective DSO.

Invoice disputes in forwarding cluster around three sources:

  • Rate mismatches between quote and invoice. The client was quoted one rate, the invoice shows another, and no one communicated the change. Fix: lock quoted rates in your system and flag any deviation before the invoice is generated.
  • Unexpected pass-through charges. Detention, demurrage, document amendments, and destination handling fees that weren't itemised in the original quote. Fix: be explicit in every quote about what's included and what's pass-through at actuals.
  • Missing or incorrect supporting documents. HBLs, AWBs, duty receipts, and delivery confirmations that the client's accounts team requires before processing payment. Fix: automate document delivery alongside the invoice — one email, everything attached.

A Mumbai-based forwarder handling India-UAE volumes reduced invoice dispute rates from 22% to 8% over six months by making one change: sending the HBL, duty receipt, and invoice together in a single email within 48 hours of shipment closure. Dispute resolution time dropped from 14 days to 4 days, cutting effective DSO by nearly 12 days — without a single additional collection call.

Build a Collections Cadence That Runs Without You

Most SME forwarders collect informally — someone calls when invoices look overdue. The result is inconsistency: some clients get followed up on day 35, others drift to day 80 before anyone notices.

A structured cadence triggered from invoice issue date produces far more consistent results:

  1. Day 0: Invoice issued with all supporting documents. Payment terms stated clearly in the email body, not just the footer.
  2. Day 3: Automated receipt confirmation — ask the client to confirm receipt and flag any questions. Eliminates the "we never received it" response 30 days later.
  3. Day −7 before due date: Friendly automated reminder. Many clients pay on this trigger if there are no open disputes.
  4. Due date + 3: Personal contact from the account manager — not a generic finance email. Frame it as checking in.
  5. Due date + 15: Credit limit review. If payment is still outstanding, assess whether to pause new bookings pending settlement.

Automate steps 1–3 so they never get missed. Keep steps 4–5 personal so the relationship isn't damaged by a tone-deaf system email.

Payment Terms and Credit Limits: Decisions Made at Onboarding

DSO is not only about collection speed — it is about the payment terms you agree to upfront and how consistently you enforce them.

  • Net 30 vs. Net 45 vs. Net 60: Each additional 15 days of payment terms adds roughly 4% to your working capital requirement. Price this in, or offer early-payment discounts — 1–2% for settlement within 10 days is standard in freight and willingly taken by clients with available cash.
  • Client credit limits: Set a maximum outstanding balance per client and hold new bookings when it's breached. Most forwarders don't do this because "the client is important." The client is also the reason the overdraft is maxed.
  • Advance payment for new clients: A percentage advance or bank guarantee for clients without a trading history is industry-standard. Legitimate importers expect it from a well-run forwarder.
  • Currency terms on cross-border invoices: On India-UAE and India-US lanes, specify clearly whether the invoice is in INR, AED, or USD and who bears exchange rate movement. A currency dispute is as disruptive as a rate dispute.

What 45-Day DSO Looks Like on the P&L

Here is what changes when DSO moves from 70 to 45 days on a forwarding business doing ₹15 crore in annual turnover:

Metric DSO: 70 Days DSO: 45 Days
Debtors ledger balance ₹2.88 crore ₹1.85 crore
Working capital freed ₹1.03 crore
Overdraft interest saved (at 13%) ~₹13.4 lakh/year
Finance team follow-up hours 20+ hrs/week 6–8 hrs/week

The interest saving alone often covers the annual cost of the software that makes the improvement possible.

Where Technology Closes the Remaining Gap

Manual billing — jobs closed in one system, invoices raised in another, documents emailed separately — is structurally incompatible with sub-45-day DSO. The delays are built into the workflow.

Modern freight billing automation integrates the job file directly with invoice generation: when costs are posted against a shipment, the invoice populates automatically, supporting documents attach from the same record, and the collections workflow starts the clock. No handoff between operations and finance. No re-keying. No 10-day billing lag because someone forgot to pass the file across.

What to look for in a billing and AR tool built for freight:

  • Job-to-invoice automation: Invoice generation directly from confirmed job costs with no manual re-entry.
  • Multi-currency support: INR, AED, USD, and EUR on the same platform for forwarders on India-UAE and India-US lanes.
  • Document bundling: HBL, AWB, duty receipts, and customs documents attached automatically at the point of sending.
  • Automated follow-up sequences: Configurable reminders triggered from invoice issue date — not from someone's memory.
  • Real-time AR ageing: Knowing which client is at 35 days versus 65 days without building the report in Excel each week.

If your freight forwarding software doesn't connect job management directly to billing and collections, the DSO problem will persist regardless of how diligently your finance team follows up.

What is a realistic DSO target for an SME freight forwarder?
For most SME forwarders handling India, UAE, and US trade lanes, 40–50 days is achievable within 6–12 months of systematic process improvement. Sub-30-day DSO is possible on lanes with advance payment requirements, but it is not a realistic general target without restructuring payment terms fundamentally.
Do I need to be aggressive with clients to reduce DSO?
No. The biggest improvements come from billing faster, sending cleaner invoices with all supporting documents attached, and running automated reminders before the due date. Clients who receive accurate invoices with everything they need to process payment tend to pay on time without chasing.
How do I handle clients who consistently pay late despite reminders?
First, confirm whether the delay is systemic — their accounts team processes payments on fixed weekly cycles — or behavioural. If systemic, align your invoice timing to their payment run. If behavioural, introduce credit limits and booking holds. Price the cost of extended credit into your rates for clients who consistently run beyond 60 days.

DSO reduction is one of the highest-return operational improvements a freight forwarder can make, and most of it does not require technology — it requires billing earlier, sending cleaner invoices, and running a consistent collections process. Technology accelerates it by removing the manual gaps that let things fall between operations and finance.

If you want to see how Shipmnts handles billing automation, collections workflows, and real-time AR ageing in a single platform, book a demo and we'll walk you through the finance module with your numbers.