1. Indiana-specific invoice requirements
- Sales tax line: 7.00% state rate. Most services rendered in Indiana are exempt from sales tax — but materials, parts, and tangible goods are not. State 7% uniform; very few local additions.
- Late-fee cap: Indiana statute Ind. Code §24-4.6-1-101 caps interest on unpaid invoices at 1.5% per month. Spell out the rate in writing on every invoice and in your contract — courts won't enforce undisclosed fees.
- Right-to-cancel notice: Customers in Indiana get 72-hour cancellation rights on certain home-services contracts. Disclose this in your terms.
2. Attorney line items + standard terms
Every attorney invoice in Indiana should itemize work clearly. Standard attorneys use Net 30 terms with a 100% deposit required upfront.
- Hourly billing — billed by hour (~$350 default).
- Flat fee — service — billed by flat.
- Filing fees (cost advance) — billed by itemized.
- Trust deposit (IOLTA) — billed by flat.
3. Attorney licensing in Indiana
Bar admission required. Trust accounting (IOLTA) governed by state bar rules; commingling client funds is sanctionable.
4. Send and follow up
Send the invoice the same day work completes. Use software that records open events and offers a one-click online payment so you don't need to chase a check by mail. Indiana customers expect digital payment options today — accepting card and ACH typically reduces days-to-paid by 30–50%.
Indiana metro guides
Metro-specific guides include the combined sales-tax rate and local pricing benchmarks.
- Invoicing as a attorney in Indianapolis
- Invoicing as a attorney in Fort Wayne
- Invoicing as a attorney in South Bend
- Invoicing as a attorney in Evansville
- Invoicing as a attorney in Lafayette
- Invoicing as a attorney in Elkhart
- Invoicing as a attorney in Terre Haute
- Invoicing as a attorney in Bloomington
- Invoicing as a attorney in Muncie
- Invoicing as a attorney in Michigan City
- Invoicing as a attorney in Kokomo