The B2B Recovery Plan
Contract & Communications
Original agreements, purchase orders, invoices, and all email chains showing the deal and breach.
Document Non-Performance
What was promised vs. delivered. Late shipments, defective goods, incomplete work.
Calculate Your Damages
Invoice amounts, lost revenue, replacement costs, interest on late payments.
Commercial Law Is Clear
UCC governs sales of goods. Contract law covers services. Interest and attorney fees may be recoverable.
Common Small Business / B2B Disputes Situations
Browse demand letter templates for specific Small Business / B2B Disputes disputes:
Small Business Loan Dispute
Dispute predatory small business loans or merchant cash advances.
Payment Processor Dispute
Dispute payment processors holding funds, charging hidden fees, or closing accounts.
Supplier Breach of Contract
Demand compensation when suppliers fail to deliver as contracted.
Non-Compete Dispute
Dispute overly broad or unenforceable non-compete agreements.
Document Shredding Dispute
Dispute shredding services for data breaches or improper destruction.
Domain Name Dispute
Recover stolen or disputed domain names.
Vendor Contract Dispute
Dispute vendor contract issues.
Customer Non-Payment Dispute
Collect unpaid invoices from customers.
Partnership Dispute
Dispute business partnership issues.
Franchise Dispute
Dispute franchise agreement issues.
Business Dispute FAQ
How long before I can sue?
A demand letter is often required or advisable first. Give 10-30 days to respond before escalating.
Can I charge interest?
Often yes - check your contract and state law. Many states allow interest on overdue business debts.
Should I use a collection agency?
Consider it for older debts you don't have time to pursue. But you'll typically get only 50-70% of the collected amount.
What about attorney fees?
If your contract includes an attorney fee provision, you may recover legal costs. Without it, recovery depends on state law.
Can I file in small claims court?
Many business disputes qualify if under the dollar limit. No lawyer needed. Fast resolution.
What if they're in another state?
You can often sue where the contract was formed or performed. Long-arm statutes may allow suing them in your state.
Should I stop providing services?
If they're not paying, you may have the right to stop work. Check your contract for notice requirements first.
About FreeDemandLetter
FreeDemandLetter provides free, AI-powered demand letter generation with location-specific legal citations. Our content is reviewed by subject matter specialists and regularly updated to reflect current laws. We help thousands of people resolve disputes effectively—but we're not lawyers, and this isn't legal advice. For complex situations, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.
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Business runs on trust. When someone breaks it, hold them accountable.
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