Two terms often used in this context are outstanding invoices and overdue invoices. While they might sound similar, they carry different meanings, and for retail suppliers, understanding the difference can help avoid lost revenue and unnecessary disputes.
An outstanding invoice is any invoice that has been issued but not yet paid in full. This can happen for several reasons:
An overdue invoice, on the other hand, is one where the payment date has passed. These invoices are past due and require immediate follow-up. All overdue invoices are technically outstanding, but not all outstanding invoices are overdue.
For suppliers, this distinction matters because overdue invoices often require more urgent action and carry a higher risk of write-offs or retailer deductions.
In retail supply chains, the difference between getting paid on time and having money tied up for months often comes down to compliance. Retailers like Walmart, Target, and Amazon have strict EDI (Electronic Data Interchange), ASN (Advanced Shipping Notice), and invoicing rules. Even a small mismatch in data can delay payment.
When invoices remain outstanding, they can trigger:
Each unresolved invoice not only delays payment but can also shrink your profit margins if deductions are applied.
Leaving invoices unresolved has a cascading effect on your business:
For retail suppliers working with multiple large retailers, these issues multiply quickly and can impact operational stability.
Traditionally, accounts receivable teams handle outstanding invoices manually:
This can take 30–90 minutes per invoice. Multiply that by hundreds or thousands of invoices, and the workload becomes overwhelming.
Automation changes the game. Platforms like iNymbus replace slow, manual processes with:
With automation, dispute resolution time can drop from weeks to days, reducing write-offs and freeing up AR teams to focus on strategic work.
Imagine a supplier ships goods to a major retailer on June 1. Upon delivery, the retailer reports a 2% shortage and pays only 98% of the invoice. The remaining amount is withheld until proof of delivery and shipment documentation are provided.
Without automation, gathering and submitting these documents could take weeks. With iNymbus, the process can be completed in hours, allowing the supplier to recover payment faster and protect their cash flow.
Outstanding and overdue invoices are part of doing business, but unmanaged delays can drain cash flow and reduce profitability. For retail suppliers, automation offers a faster, more accurate way to resolve disputes, recover deductions, and maintain strong financial health.
iNymbus integrates with over 40+ major retailers, including Amazon, Walmart, Target, and Costco, automating deduction management and outstanding invoice disputes from claim intake to resolution.