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For landscaping & lawn care

Invoicing & payment reminders for landscaping & lawn care

One-off installs, recurring maintenance, residential and commercial — all with different people who forget to pay. FieldNudge sends the polite reminders so you stay in the field, not on the phone.

Start free — no card

Free for 30 days or 30 invoices. No card.

Why landscaping invoices slip

Landscaping cash flow is lumpy: a big spring install, then months of recurring mowing and maintenance, split across homeowners who pay by Venmo and commercial accounts on net-30.

The homeowner who “totally meant to pay” isn't dodging you — they're busy, and your invoice scrolled off their phone. One reminder usually fixes it. The problem is you're on a mower, not at a desk, when that reminder should go out.

Seasonal work makes a late invoice hurt more: an account that pays slowly in November is money you needed before the winter slowdown, not after it.

The reminder rhythm

Whether it's a one-time install or monthly maintenance, set the due date and FieldNudge nudges gently before and after — no app for your customer to install.

3 days before dueHeads-up
On due dateDue today
3 days overdueDisregard if paid
7 days overdueJust checking in
14 days overdueNeeds attention
30 days overdueFinal notice

We never touch the money

Residential clients keep paying by check, Venmo, Cash App, or a card link; commercial accounts on net-30. FieldNudge chases the invoice — you keep collecting exactly the way you always have.

Questions

Can I use FieldNudge for both one-off jobs and recurring maintenance?

Yes. Each invoice gets its own reminder cadence based on its due date, so a one-time patio install and a monthly mowing invoice are both handled — independently, and hands-off.

Most of my clients pay by Venmo or check — does that matter?

Not at all. FieldNudge never handles the payment, so your customers keep paying by Venmo, Cash App, check, or a card link. It only sends the reminder and links to a clean invoice; you mark it paid when the money arrives.

How do I remind a homeowner without sounding pushy?

The reminders are written to be friendly first and firmer only if an invoice really drags on — never debt-collector tone. For most homeowners the first gentle nudge is all it takes.

Stop chasing. Start getting paid.