Net 30 From Today

Find the exact date that is 30 calendar days from today for Net 30 invoice payment terms. Select today as your invoice date and Net 30 as the term below.

Calculate Net 30 due date
Quick start: Click Use today to set today's date, select Net 30 as the term, and click Calculate Due Date.

Enter the invoice date and payment terms — get the exact due date, days remaining or overdue, and a suggested follow-up checkpoint.

Net 30 invoicesAccounts receivableOverdue checksB2B payment termsSupplier invoicesEnd of month terms
Example: Invoice 15 Apr · Net 30 → due 15 May • Invoice 1 Jan · Net 60 → due 2 Mar • Invoice 5 Feb · End of month → due 28 Feb

After calculating, copy the result into your workflow instead of searching for the calculator again.

Workflow-ready after calculation

Calculate first, then reuse the result

After you calculate, UtilityPilot can turn the result into a clean note you can paste into your SOP, spreadsheet, CRM, Slack, Notion, checklist or email.

Plain-English result — paste into any tool

For internal process notes

For client-ready wording

For Notion, docs or wikis

Share the tool without your values

No sign-up · No stored inputs · Copied text does not include your entered values

Formula

Due Date = Invoice Date + Payment Term (in calendar or business days)

Calendar days: add the term number directly to the invoice date regardless of weekends. Business days: advance one weekday at a time, skipping Saturday and Sunday. End of month: last calendar day of the invoice month, optionally plus 15 days.

Worked Examples

Scenario 1 — Net 30 calendar days:

Invoice issued Monday 2 March 2026. Terms: Net 30 calendar days.

Due date: 2 March + 30 days = Thursday 1 April 2026

Scenario 2 — Net 30 business days (same invoice):

Same invoice, but terms specify Net 30 business days.

30 weekdays from 2 March ≈ Wednesday 13 May 2026

That is 6 weeks and 4 days later — a material difference.

Scenario 3 — End of month:

Invoice issued 10 February 2026. Terms: End of month.

Due date: last day of February = Saturday 28 February 2026

Scenario 4 — Checking an overdue invoice:

A Net 60 invoice was issued on 1 January 2026. Today is 15 March 2026. Is it overdue?

Due date: 1 January + 60 days = 2 March 2026

Today (15 March) − Due date (2 March) = 13 days overdue

Always confirm whether your contract specifies calendar or business days. Net 30 in calendar days is significantly different from Net 30 in business days.

Common Mistakes

  • Assuming Net 30 means business days. Standard Net 30, Net 60 etc. almost always refer to calendar days unless the contract explicitly states otherwise.
  • Starting the count from the day after. Day 0 is the invoice date. Day 1 is the next day. A Net 7 invoice dated Monday is due the following Monday.
  • Ignoring weekend and holiday adjustments. If the due date falls on a Saturday, Sunday or public holiday, the operational deadline usually moves to the next business day.
  • Confusing End of Month with Net 30. End of Month means due on the last day of the invoice month. Net 30 adds 30 days to the invoice date — a different result for most invoice dates.

Guide

How to Use

  1. 1

    Enter the invoice date

    The date the invoice was issued to the client.

  2. 2

    Select payment terms

    Choose from Due on Receipt, Net 7 through Net 90, End of Month, EOM + 15 or a custom day count.

  3. 3

    Choose calendar or business days

    Most standard net terms use calendar days. Switch to business days only if your contract specifies it.

  4. 4

    Review the result

    The result shows the due date, days remaining or overdue status, a follow-up checkpoint date, and a weekend warning if applicable.

  5. 5

    Copy the follow-up note

    Copy a ready-to-use professional note for email, CRM or your invoice checklist.

Next Steps

What to do next

What is Net 30?

Net 30 is the most common B2B payment term. It means the full invoice amount is due within 30 calendar days of the invoice date. Weekends count in the 30-day window — Net 30 is not 30 working days.

Worked example

Invoice dated 1 June, Net 30

1 June + 30 calendar days = 1 July

If 1 July is a Saturday, the real due date is Monday 3 July.

Use the Net 30 Real Due Date Calculator for automatic weekend adjustment.

Net 30 vs other common terms

Due on receipt

Payment due immediately upon receiving the invoice

Net 7

7 calendar days — used for short-term freelance work

Net 14

14 calendar days — common for small business invoices

Net 30

30 calendar days — standard B2B payment term

Net 45

45 calendar days — for larger enterprise accounts

Net 60

60 calendar days — used by some large corporations

Use this in your workflow

After calculating, use Copy result summary to paste the due date into your AR spreadsheet, CRM, Slack, Notion, email reminder or accounts system. Your team can reference the saved note without recalculating.

Need weekend and holiday adjustment? Use Net 30 Real Due Date Calculator.

Need Net 45 or Net 60? Use the full Invoice Due Date Calculator.

Related invoice calculators