Contractor Invoicing and Payment in Federal Contracts
Federal contractors operate under a payment framework governed by statute, regulation, and contract-specific clauses that determine when invoices may be submitted, how agencies must respond, and what remedies apply when payment is delayed. The Prompt Payment Act and its implementing regulations in the Federal Acquisition Regulation establish binding timelines that affect cash flow, interest accrual, and audit exposure across every contract type. Understanding the mechanics of this system — from invoice preparation to final payment — is foundational for any firm doing business with the federal government.
Definition and scope
Contractor invoicing in the federal context is the formal process by which a contractor requests payment from a federal agency for work performed or goods delivered under a contract. Payment is not automatic upon delivery; it follows a structured cycle governed primarily by:
- The Prompt Payment Act (31 U.S.C. §§ 3901–3907), which sets mandatory payment deadlines and interest penalties for late payment
- FAR Subpart 32.9 (48 C.F.R. § 32.900 et seq.), which implements the Prompt Payment Act requirements in federal contracts
- FAR 52.232-25 (Prompt Payment clause), which is incorporated into most fixed-price contracts
- FAR 52.232-7 and FAR 52.232-16, which govern payments under time-and-materials and cost-reimbursement contracts respectively
The scope of payment requirements extends across types of government contracts, from firm-fixed-price awards to cost-plus arrangements, though the specific invoice format, supporting documentation, and payment timing differ substantially by contract type.
How it works
The federal payment cycle follows a structured sequence with defined windows at each stage.
1. Invoice submission
A proper invoice must contain, at minimum: contractor name and address, invoice date and number, contract number, description of goods or services, quantity, unit price, and total amount. Under FAR 32.905, an invoice missing any required element is considered "improper" and must be returned to the contractor within 7 days with a written explanation of the deficiency.
2. Receipt and acceptance
Payment timing under the Prompt Payment Act is tied to acceptance — the formal determination by the government that goods or services conform to contract requirements. The contracting officer representative typically performs inspection and acceptance, a distinction that separates their role from the contracting officer who administers payment terms.
3. Payment deadline and interest
For most commercial contracts, the standard payment due date is 30 days after receipt of a proper invoice or acceptance of goods and services, whichever is later (FAR 32.904). If payment is not made by the due date, the agency is required to pay interest automatically — without the contractor filing a claim — at a rate established quarterly by the Department of the Treasury under the Renegotiation Act. The Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) audits contractor billings on cost-reimbursement contracts; invoices that cannot be supported by adequate records are subject to disallowance (DCAA Contract Audit Manual).
4. Electronic invoicing
Agencies increasingly require submission through the Invoice Processing Platform (IPP), a government-wide system operated by the Bureau of the Fiscal Service. SAM.gov registration is a prerequisite for electronic payment processing.
Common scenarios
Fixed-price contracts vs. cost-reimbursement contracts
Under a firm-fixed-price contract, the contractor submits invoices tied to deliverables or milestones. Payment is straightforward: deliver, invoice, receive payment within 30 days. Cost-reimbursement contracts require the contractor to submit detailed cost data — labor hours by category, direct materials, subcontractor costs, indirect rates — and are subject to audit under FAR 42.7. The Defense Contract Audit Agency reviews these submissions, and provisional billing rates may differ from final settled rates, creating reconciliation obligations addressed through incurred cost submissions.
Progress payments
Under FAR 52.232-16, contractors on large fixed-price contracts may receive progress payments — typically up to 80 percent of allowable costs incurred — before final delivery. Progress payments are not considered contract financing for purposes of the Prompt Payment Act; different rules govern their timing and use.
Subcontractor payment flow
Prime contractors that receive progress payments or advance payments must flow down payment obligations to subcontractors. FAR 52.232-27 requires primes to pay subcontractors within 7 days of receiving payment from the government. Subcontracting plans and payment terms must be documented per subcontracting plan requirements.
Contract closeout
Final invoices must be submitted within the timeframe specified in the contract, typically 120 days after contract completion. Late final invoices can complicate contract closeout procedures and may result in forfeiture of payment for unsubstantiated amounts.
Decision boundaries
Several threshold conditions determine which payment rules and remedies apply:
- Contract type determines invoice format: Time-and-materials contracts require labor category breakdowns and actual hours; fixed-price contracts do not
- Proper vs. improper invoice: If an agency fails to return an improper invoice within 7 days, the invoice is deemed proper and the 30-day payment clock starts from the original submission date (FAR 32.905(b)(3))
- Disputes vs. payment claims: A dispute over the amount owed follows the Contract Disputes Act (41 U.S.C. §§ 7101–7109); interest on disputed amounts accrues differently from Prompt Payment interest — see government contract disputes and claims for the procedural distinction
- False billing exposure: Submitting an invoice that misrepresents costs, hours, or deliverables carries liability under the False Claims Act, which imposes civil penalties per false claim in addition to treble damages (31 U.S.C. § 3729) — a risk analyzed in detail at false claims act for government contractors
- DCAA audit triggers: On cost-reimbursement contracts, billings that exceed funded amounts, include unallowable cost categories, or lack timekeeping support are flagged during audit; allowable costs in government contracts defines what the government will and will not reimburse
Contractors with questions about the broader compliance environment — from registration to performance ratings — can use governmentcontractorauthority.com as a reference point across the full federal contracting lifecycle.