Your options when a Alaska client won't pay
If you're reading this, a client in Alaska owes you money and isn't responding. This page walks through your actual options, what Alaska law gives you, and what an effective demand letter looks like.
Your realistic options
There are essentially five paths forward when a client doesn't pay, roughly in the order most freelancers should consider them:
What most freelancers default to: more emails, more texts, maybe a phone call. Works in the first 30 days, when the client is merely late rather than avoiding you. Success rates fall sharply after 60 days. After 90 days, recovery drops below 20%. The longer you wait, the harder it gets.
The move most freelancers skip. Low cost, and solid success rates — industry estimates put single demand letter effectiveness in the 20–40% range, with structured sequences typically performing better because each escalation signals credible intent to file. It works because it raises the stakes without requiring anything yet: your client realizes you're organized, you know the law, and you're prepared to go further. Many settle before that becomes necessary.
Real teeth. Claims up to $10,000, with filing fees from $50 to $100. The downside: filing takes 2–4 hours of preparation, you have to arrange service of process, you'll spend a full day in court, and if you win, you still have to collect on the judgment yourself. Most freelance invoices fit comfortably within the dollar limits.
Agencies take 25% to 50% of whatever they recover. Aggressive tactics, and you lose control of tone and timing — which matters if you might want to work in the same industry again.
Generally uneconomic below $15,000 in dispute. An attorney will charge $200 to $500 just to draft and send a single demand letter. Worth considering for high-dollar B2B disputes, overkill for a typical freelance invoice.
Alaska small claims — the reference data
If it comes to filing, these are the rules that apply. Even if you never file, this is the information your demand letter should reference, because specificity is what makes a demand letter effective.
Figures reflect Alaska small claims rules as of publication. Filing fees and limits may change; verify current figures with Alaska courts before filing. This page is for general information and is not legal advice.
Why demand letters work — and why most of them fail
A non-paying client has already ignored you once. They will ignore “please remit payment at your earliest convenience” a second time. Generic demand letters fail because they signal exactly the thing the client is already betting on: that you're frustrated but not prepared to do anything about it.
What actually changes a non-payer's calculus is specificity. Naming the exact court where you'd file. Citing the filing fee at your claim amount. Noting the typical hearing timeline. Noting that attorney representation at the hearing is restricted, so your client can't simply lawyer up to delay. Each specific detail is a signal that you've done the work, you know what you're doing, and the next step is real.
The second thing that matters is escalation. A single letter, no matter how well written, is easy to file away and forget. A sequence of three or four messages — each with escalating tone, spaced a week or two apart — creates sustained psychological pressure without crossing into harassment. Professional reminder, firm follow-up, formal demand, final notice before filing.
The hard part isn't writing any one letter. It's the system around it: calibrating tone across a sequence so it escalates without sounding unhinged, sending on a real schedule when you have other work to do, tracking replies so you know when to pause, and knowing when to stop negotiating and file. That's the part most freelancers can't sustain.
Doing it yourself: the realistic checklist
If you want to handle this yourself, here's what's actually involved.
Neutral, short, gives benefit of the doubt. Restate invoice number, amount, original due date.
Same facts, escalated tone. References how long past due. Mentions next steps without specifying them yet.
Cites the specific District Court (Alaska Court System) where you would file. Includes the correct filing fee for your claim amount. References the $10,000 individual limit. Formatted so it could be attached to a small claims complaint later.
Last communication before filing. Specific deadline, specific next step, legally defensible tone.
for your client's district. Venue is generally the defendant's district — get this wrong and your case can be dismissed.
They change. Fee waivers are available for low-income plaintiffs but require a separate form.
for each send date — with buffer, in case you're traveling or mid-project.
Not when you remember. Not when you're angry. On schedule — inconsistency undermines the whole sequence.
If the client responds with a genuine negotiation, pause. If they respond with stalling, continue. Knowing the difference matters.
— every email sent, every reply received, every timestamp. You'll need them as evidence if it comes to filing.
have your final demand formatted correctly to attach as Exhibit A to the small claims complaint.
If you'd rather not
We run that checklist for $19.99.
You enter your invoice and client details in about five minutes. PromptSettle then does the three things most freelancers can't sustain themselves.
First, we write four letters with calibrated escalation — professional reminder, firm follow-up, formal demand with Alaska court specifics, final demand before filing. Getting the tone right across a sequence is hard: too soft and it gets ignored, too aggressive and it backfires.
Second, we send each letter on schedule, from your name, at the right interval. Most DIY sequences fail here — the next project hits, the month-old invoice loses urgency, and the sequence quietly dies.
Third, we produce a court-ready final demand, formatted so it can be attached as an exhibit to a Alaska small claims complaint if you end up filing.
Replies come to your inbox. Pause anytime if your client starts negotiating. One-time $19.99, no subscription, no percentage of what you recover.
Alaska FAQ
About this guide
Written and maintained by the PromptSettle team. This guide is based on the following primary sources:
- Alaska District Court (Alaska Court System), Small Claims — procedures, dollar limits, venue rules, and filing guidance specific to small claims in Alaska.
- State court self-help resources — National Center for State Courts directory — authoritative link to Alaska's official court website and self-help materials.
- Nolo Legal Encyclopedia — nolo.com — demand letter effectiveness estimates and debt collection guidance for small businesses.
This page is for general information only and is not legal advice. PromptSettle is not a law firm and does not represent you. Filing fees, statutory limits, and court procedures can change — verify current information with Alaska courts before filing. If your situation involves amounts above small claims limits, a complex contract, or unusual factual circumstances, consult a Alaska-licensed attorney.
Last reviewed March 2026.