The Lawyer’s Guide to Invoicing and Getting Paid On Time in Pakistan
Many fine lawyers are poor at one unglamorous thing: getting paid. They do excellent work, then feel awkward about the fee, send a vague invoice late, and chase payment reluctantly. Clients are not the only problem — the lawyer’s own discomfort with money is often what lets fees slide.
Clarity prevents disputes
Most fee disputes are born at the beginning, not the end — in the gap between what the client thought they were paying and what the lawyer thought they were charging. A clear fee understanding up front, ideally in writing, removes that gap. When the basis of the fee is agreed, the invoice is simply a confirmation, not a negotiation.
- Agree the fee, and the basis, before the work begins
- Invoice promptly — value fades the longer you wait
- Make the invoice clear: what was done, for how much
- Offer instalments for larger fees, and make paying easy
The Pakistani instalment reality
In Pakistan, a lump-sum fee paid in instalments is often the most realistic structure for clients of modest means. Handled well, it is good for both sides — the client manages cash flow, the lawyer secures the engagement. The key is to track what has been paid and what remains, so nothing is forgotten.
How Legal Diary helps
Legal Diary creates clean, professional invoices in seconds, supports lump-sum and instalment billing, and includes payment QR codes for JazzCash, Easypaisa and bank transfer — so clients can pay in a tap. Getting paid stops being awkward and becomes a quiet, dignified part of the workflow.
Invoice clearly and get paid faster — start a free Legal Diary trial today.
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