Who this is for
Independent management consultants, strategy advisors, fractional executives, and anyone selling their time and judgment to a client. If you charge a monthly retainer, run scoped engagements, or invoice for advisory work where the deliverable is the conversation itself, this template is calibrated for you.
What sets a consultant invoice apart
Three things distinguish a consultant invoice from a generic freelance bill:
1. Scope summary. Your client's finance team often hasn't read your contract. A one-line summary on the invoice ("Strategic advisory — May 2026") lets them categorize the expense and approve it faster.
2. Travel and expenses separately. Many engagements include reimbursable expenses. Always invoice these as their own line items with itemized receipts attached. Burying them in the retainer total invites disputes.
3. Renewal / cancellation language in terms. Most consulting retainers auto-renew. Stating "Engagement renews monthly unless cancelled with 30 days' notice" protects both sides.
Pricing structures consultants commonly use
- Monthly retainer — flat fee for a defined scope and access level. Most common for ongoing advisory.
- Day rate — for project-based work or workshop days. Use this for one-off engagements.
- Hourly with cap — for analysis-heavy work where total hours are uncertain. Always quote a not-to-exceed.
- Outcome / performance fee — milestone payments tied to deliverables. Risky for both sides if outcomes aren't measurable; use sparingly.
Payment terms that fit consulting
Net 30 is the corporate standard. Larger clients (Fortune 500, government) often push for Net 45 or Net 60 — fight for Net 30 unless the engagement is large enough to absorb the float. For smaller clients, Net 14 is reasonable.
Always include a late-fee clause. A common one: "Late fees of 2% per month on overdue balances." You don't need to enforce it, but having it written down measurably reduces late payments.
How to use this template
- Open the consultant template.
- Replace the placeholder month and rates with your own.
- Adjust line items — keep travel as a separate line even if it's zero this month, so the format stays consistent.
- Update the From and Bill to. Include your tax ID if your jurisdiction requires it.
- Click Download PDF. The invoice is also saved to History.