Fidesic Blog | Accounts Payable (AP) Automation for Dynamics GP

How to Turn Early Payment Discounts Into a Competitive Advantage

Written by Fido | Feb 4, 2026 7:30:47 PM

Early payment discounts are one of the most controversial topics in accounts payable... well maybe "controversial" is too strong a word choice. But the point is, finance teams often focus on extending payment terms to improve cash flow and working capital by holding onto cash longer. However, early payment discounts offer one of the clearest paths for AP team to create a measurable financial impact. This is one way to move out of accounts payable as a processing function into AP as a strategic center.

In this post we will share some tips on how to build a systematic approach to capturing these savings, calculate ROI and track performance.

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Identify Discount Opportunities

Start by auditing existing vendor contracts. Many businesses have early payment terms buried in agreements they've never leveraged. The standard structure offers 1-2% off invoices paid within 10 days versus the typical 30-day window.

For vendors without existing discount terms, the ask is straightforward. Suppliers value payment predictability, and many will offer discounts in exchange for accelerated cash flow on their end.

Calculate the ROI

Not every early payment discount makes financial sense. The decision depends on comparing the annualized value of the discount against the organization's cost of capital.

When a vendor offers early payment terms like "2/10 net 30," they're giving you 2% off if you pay within 10 days instead of the standard 30. That 20-day acceleration might seem minor, but the math tells a different story.

To find the annualized return, use this formula:

(Discount percentage) × (365 ÷ Days accelerated) = Annualized return

For a 2/10 net 30 offer:

2% × (365 ÷ 20) = 2% × 18.25 = 36.5% annualized return

Now compare that figure to your cost of capital. If your company borrows at 8% or even 12%, taking that discount delivers a return three to four times higher than what you're paying for cash access. You're effectively earning 36.5% on the money you deployed early.

Run this calculation for every discount opportunity on the table. A 1% discount for paying 15 days early yields about 24% annualized. A 3% discount for paying 45 days early comes in around 24% as well. Not all discounts are created equal, and the annualized rate reveals which ones deserve priority.

The decision framework becomes straightforward: if the annualized discount return exceeds your cost of capital, take it. If it falls below, hold your cash and pay at standard terms.

 

Track Performance

Discount capture rate is a key metric that often goes unmeasured. Finance teams should monitor how many available discounts are actually being captured and calculate the real dollar savings on a quarterly basis.

This data serves two purposes: it demonstrates the value of accounts payable investments to leadership and reveals process gaps that prevent discount capture.

Negotiate Better Terms

A track record of reliable, on-time payments creates leverage. Vendors notice which customers pay predictably, and that reliability has value worth negotiating for.

Approach strategic suppliers with payment history data and request improved discount percentages. The conversation becomes easier when both sides can see the mutual benefit—suppliers get faster, more predictable cash flow while buyers capture additional savings.

Quick-Start To-Do List: Early Payment Discounts

Week 1: Discovery

  • Pull your top 20 vendors by spend volume
  • Review each contract for existing early payment terms (many are buried and unused)
  • Confirm your organization's current cost of capital with treasury or finance leadership
  • Find a few gems in there that will get immediate results.

Week 2: Calculate and Prioritize

  • Run the annualized return formula on every discount term you found
  • Flag all discounts yielding returns above your cost of capital
  • Rank opportunities by dollar value (discount percentage × typical invoice amount × annual volume)

Week 3: Capture

  • Adjust payment timing on the highest-value opportunities immediately
  • Communicate with AP processors about which vendors now require accelerated payment
  • Document any process blockers preventing timely payment (slow approvals, invoice exceptions)

Week 4: Track

  • Create a simple tracker: discounts available vs. discounts captured
  • Calculate monthly dollar savings
  • Note missed discounts and root causes

Ongoing

  • Approach 2 to 3 vendors per month without existing terms to request discounts
  • Revisit strategic suppliers quarterly with payment history data to negotiate improved rates

The biggest immediate wins come from discounts already sitting in existing contracts. No negotiation required, just execution.

Conclusion

Early payment discounts offer one of the clearest paths from accounts payable optimization to measurable financial impact. The strategy requires upfront work to identify opportunities and build tracking systems, but the returns compound over time as discount capture rates improve and better terms get negotiated across the vendor base.