Skip to main content
DateToolsHQ

Net 60 Calculator

Find an invoice's due date under Net 60 payment terms—60 calendar days from the invoice date, with optional weekend adjustment.

Weekend adjustment uses UTC weekdays only (not holiday calendars).

Enter an invoice date to see the net 60 due date.

Next step: Net 15 Calculator

How it works

Net 60 means payment is due 60 calendar days after the invoice date. Enter the invoice date and the calculator adds 60 calendar days on the UTC calendar, using the same engine as the Invoice Due Date Calculator.

Weekend handling is optional. When the due date falls on a Saturday or Sunday, you can leave it unchanged, move it to the next business day, or the previous business day. Adjustments follow UTC weekdays only and do not apply US holiday lists.

Common uses

Calculating long-cycle invoice due dates, confirming payment deadlines stated as "Net 60" on an invoice or contract, and large-vendor or enterprise accounts-payable planning.

  • Enterprise vendor terms

    Find the due date for an invoice issued under common large-enterprise Net 60 terms.

  • Cash-flow forecasting

    Plan around a longer payment cycle when forecasting incoming or outgoing cash flow.

  • Other net terms

    Use the Net 15 Calculator, Net 30 Calculator, Net 45 Calculator, or the Invoice Due Date Calculator for other terms.

The Business Time Calculators Guide explains when to use each deadline and due-date tool in this cluster—invoice due dates, contract terms, SLAs, business-day forward math, days remaining until a target date, and notice periods.

The Business Days vs Calendar Days Guide explains when weekends and holidays count and which day type applies to invoices, notice periods, SLAs, and contracts.

The Business Days Between Dates Guide explains how to count weekdays between two dates and when to use range, forward, or until-date calculators.

The Working Days Guide explains working day schedules, how they compare to business days, and common planning use cases.

The Net Payment Terms Guide covers Net 10 through Net 90, calendar vs business-day terms, and how to calculate invoice due dates before you open a calculator.

The Invoice Due Date Guide explains how to compute payment due dates from invoice dates and net terms, including weekend and holiday considerations.

The Contract End Date Guide explains how to calculate contract expiration dates, renewal reminders, and notice windows before expiry.

The Payroll Cutoff Dates Guide covers payroll cutoff deadlines, processing windows, and business-day planning for pay schedules.

The Notice Period Guide explains how to estimate notice end dates for employment, rental, contract, and vendor scenarios using calendar or business days.

The SLA Deadline Guide covers response and resolution SLAs, business-day vs hour-based clocks, and holiday handling for helpdesk and vendor agreements.

The Invoice Due Date Calculator turns invoice dates and net terms (such as Net 30) into a calendar due date, with optional weekend adjustment when a due date lands on Saturday or Sunday.

The Contract End Date Calculator finds a contract end date from the start date and term length in days, weeks, months, or years, and shows 30-, 60-, and 90-day renewal reminder dates.

The SLA Deadline Calculator adds hours, calendar days, or business days to a start date and time to produce a response or resolution deadline in UTC.

The Add Business Days To Date Calculator advances a start date by a number of business days, skipping weekends and optional US federal holidays. The Subtract Business Days From Date Calculator moves backward by the same rules when you need a date before a deadline.

The Business Days Until Date Calculator counts business days remaining until a target date from today or a custom start date, with calendar days remaining and optional US federal holiday exclusion.

The Notice Period Calculator finds a notice end date from a start date and length in days, weeks, or months—using calendar or business days—with planning reminders before the end date.

When your question is how many weekdays fall between two dates—not a single due date—use the Business Days Calculator or Working Days Calculator alongside these tools.

FAQ

What does Net 60 mean?
Net 60 means the full invoice amount is due 60 calendar days after the invoice date, with no early-payment discount implied.
How is this different from the Invoice Due Date Calculator?
Same underlying due-date math—no new calculation—fixed to Net 60 instead of requiring you to pick from a dropdown.
What if the due date falls on a weekend?
By default the calendar due date is kept as-is. You can optionally move it to the next or previous business day using UTC weekdays.