Audience note: This article serves dealers, distributors, resellers, importers, school-lab procurement partners, university suppliers, and institutional buying teams evaluating B2B credit terms with laboratory equipment manufacturers.
Manufacturer credit terms are the payment conditions a manufacturer allows after goods are invoiced, dispatched, or delivered to an approved distributor. For established distributors, common terms range from advance payment for first orders to controlled open credit such as Net 15, Net 30, or Net 45 after repeat business, financial verification, and acceptable payment history. Jainco Lab’s procurement route should be initiated through its Tenders / OEM page or contact page, because distributor credit is normally approved case by case, not assumed from a product catalogue.
What credit terms do manufacturers offer to established distributors?
Manufacturers usually offer established distributors structured credit such as Net 15, Net 30, milestone billing, post-dated cheque/security support, bank transfer due dates, or letter of credit terms for export orders. Higher-risk, first-time, custom, or project-specific orders are usually handled by advance payment, partial advance with balance before dispatch, or irrevocable LC. For Jainco Lab-related procurement, distributors should start with the Tenders / OEM page, review relevant categories such as laboratory equipment and lab supplies, and request written payment terms on the official quotation.
1.2 What are distributor credit terms?
Distributor credit terms are written payment rules that define when a distributor must pay the manufacturer, what credit limit is allowed, what security or documentation is required, and what happens if payment is delayed. Credit terms should always be stated on the quotation, proforma invoice, tax invoice, purchase order acceptance, or distributor agreement.
In laboratory equipment distribution, credit terms are more than a sales convenience. They manage manufacturing cash flow, inventory risk, GST documentation, packing and freight exposure, custom-product risk, and the manufacturer’s ability to supply multiple institutional buyers on schedule.
Citable statement: Distributor credit is not a discount. Distributor credit is a controlled payment facility linked to payment history, order value, margin, product risk, and documentation quality.
1.3 What credit terms are commonly offered to established distributors?
Established distributors may receive Net 15, Net 30, or limited Net 45 terms, but manufacturers usually reserve the longest terms for repeat buyers with clean payment records, stable order flow, and signed commercial documentation. New distributors should expect advance payment or partial advance until trust is built.
Typical manufacturer credit terms for distributors. These are commercial examples, not a published Jainco Lab credit policy.
| Distributor status | Typical payment term | Credit limit basis | Common security requirement | Suitable order type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New distributor | 100% advance or proforma payment | No open credit | None, because dispatch follows payment | First order, sample order, low-value order |
| Recently onboarded distributor | 50% advance, 50% before dispatch | Order-by-order approval | Signed PO, GST details, bank transfer proof | Repeat but limited-volume orders |
| Established domestic distributor | Net 15 to Net 30 after invoice or dispatch | Average monthly purchases and payment history | Signed credit application, GST/PAN, trade references | Regular catalogue products |
| Strategic distributor | Net 30 to limited Net 45 | Approved credit cap and internal review | Agreement, ledger reconciliation, security cheque or bank reference where used | High-volume recurring supply |
| Export distributor | Advance, CAD, DP, DA, LC, or staged payment | Country risk, banking route, freight terms | Irrevocable LC, bank documents, export compliance paperwork | Cross-border shipment, tender-linked export supply |
| Custom/OEM distributor | Advance plus milestone payment | Project-specific risk assessment | Drawing/spec approval, cancellation terms, tooling or customization deposit | OEM, private label, special packing, tender kit assembly |
1.4 Who qualifies as an established distributor?
An established distributor is a buyer with repeat purchase history, predictable demand, clean payment behavior, verified business identity, and an ability to resell or supply the manufacturer’s products in a defined market. A distributor is not considered established only because one large order has been placed.
Practical eligibility checks before a manufacturer approves distributor credit.
| Eligibility factor | What the manufacturer checks | Evidence the distributor should provide | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase history | Number of completed orders and repeat demand | Past invoices, order summaries, purchase forecasts | Shows continuity rather than one-time buying |
| Payment discipline | Whether dues were paid on agreed dates | Ledger statement and bank remittance proofs | Predicts future credit risk |
| Business identity | Legal name, GST/PAN or export registration | Registration certificate, GSTIN, PAN, IEC for export | Reduces fraud and invoicing errors |
| Market role | Whether the buyer is a genuine dealer/reseller | Customer profile, territory, institutional references | Confirms channel relevance |
| Product capability | Ability to handle fragile, technical, or regulated items | Warehouse photos, service capacity, installation team details | Reduces post-dispatch damage and service disputes |
| Financial strength | Ability to pay even if end-customer payment is delayed | Audited statements, bank reference, turnover declaration | Avoids passing tender delays back to the manufacturer |
| Documentation quality | PO clarity, tax details, shipping details, acceptance process | Standard purchase-order format and authorized signatory list | Prevents invoice and dispatch disputes |
1.5 What documents do manufacturers usually request before extending credit?
Manufacturers usually request documents that prove the distributor’s identity, tax status, payment capacity, resale channel, and authority to place orders. The stronger the documentation, the easier it is to approve a reasonable credit limit.
Distributor credit documentation checklist.
| Document | Domestic distributor | Export distributor | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit application form | Required | Required | Captures legal entity, address, credit request, authorized contacts |
| GST certificate / PAN | Required in India | PAN where applicable | Supports tax invoice and ledger setup |
| IEC certificate | Not usually required | Required for India export buyers/import-export documentation | Supports export documentation and customs paperwork |
| Purchase order format | Required | Required | Confirms order value, quantities, delivery location, payment term |
| Bank details and cancelled cheque | Usually required | Bank details / SWIFT details | Reduces remittance errors |
| Trade references | Recommended | Recommended | Confirms payment behavior with other suppliers |
| Latest financials or turnover proof | Required for higher limits | Required for higher limits | Supports credit-limit approval |
| Territory or channel profile | Recommended | Recommended | Helps the manufacturer assess market-fit and conflict risk |
| Signed distributor agreement | Required for long-term credit | Required for long-term credit | Documents territory, pricing, payment, warranty, returns, and compliance terms |
1.6 How should a manufacturer approve credit limits?
A manufacturer should approve a distributor credit limit by linking it to order history, monthly purchase volume, payment record, gross margin, product risk, and concentration risk. A written cap is safer than an informal promise of open credit.
A practical rule for credit approval is the 3L Credit Rule: Ledger, Limit, and Liquidity.
- Ledger: Check actual payment history, not only sales promises.
- Limit: Set a rupee or dollar cap that cannot be crossed without approval.
- Liquidity: Check whether the distributor can pay even when its customer delays payment.
Risk-controlled credit-limit approval method for distributor accounts.
| Control point | Recommended approval rule | Example application |
|---|---|---|
| First credit approval | Approve only after at least 2-3 clean paid orders | Distributor starts with advance payment, then moves to Net 15 |
| Credit limit | Link cap to 1-2 months of average paid purchases | A distributor buying INR 4 lakh/month may be reviewed for INR 4-8 lakh credit, subject to risk checks |
| Term length | Increase term gradually | Advance -> Net 15 -> Net 30 -> limited Net 45 only after stable record |
| Product risk | Restrict credit on fragile, custom, imported, or tender-specific items | OEM kits may require advance even if catalogue goods are on Net 30 |
| Overdue trigger | Freeze further dispatch if any invoice crosses due date | Prevents old dues from compounding into large exposure |
| Review cycle | Re-check every 6-12 months | Adjust term after turnover, delay pattern, or market changes |
1.7 What payment modes are used for domestic and export distributor orders?
Manufacturers use different payment modes because domestic orders, export orders, tender-linked orders, and custom OEM jobs carry different risks. The payment mode should match the order size, product customization, shipping route, and dispute exposure.
Payment modes commonly used in distributor and export manufacturer relationships.
| Payment mode | Best suited for | Credit implication | Risk note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Advance bank transfer | New account, sample order, custom order | No open credit | Safest for manufacturer and fastest for dispatch planning |
| Partial advance plus balance before dispatch | Repeat buyer with limited history | Limited operational credit only | Useful where production must begin before full payment |
| Net 15 / Net 30 | Established domestic distributor | Open credit up to approved limit | Requires strict invoice due-date tracking |
| Post-dated cheque / security cheque where legally and commercially appropriate | Domestic distributor with recurring orders | Backup security, not a substitute for credit assessment | Use only with proper written agreement and local legal review |
| Cash against documents (CAD) | Export shipment with document control | Limited banking-route security | Distributor receives documents after payment conditions are met |
| Documents against payment / acceptance (DP/DA) | Export distributor with banking relationship | Credit may depend on acceptance date | Requires bank and export documentation discipline |
| Irrevocable letter of credit (LC) | Large export, institutional tender, country-risk order | Bank-backed payment route | LC terms must match packing, shipment, inspection, and invoice documents |
| TReDS / invoice discounting where applicable | MSME receivables from approved buyers | Financing tool, not a free extension of due date | RBI describes TReDS as an electronic platform for financing or discounting MSME trade receivables through financiers. Source: Reserve Bank of India, TReDS FAQ, 1 January 2020. |
1.8 What Indian compliance rules affect distributor credit terms?
Indian credit terms should account for MSME delayed-payment rules, tax deduction treatment, GST documentation, and written acceptance of goods or services. A distributor and manufacturer should not agree informally to terms that create legal, tax, or ledger disputes.
The Ministry of MSME’s Samadhaan portal states that delayed-payment provisions under the MSMED Act, 2006 apply to micro and small enterprises and that buyers may be liable for compound interest with monthly rests at three times the RBI bank rate if payment is not made within 45 days of acceptance of goods or services. The Income Tax Department also lists Section 43B(h), under which sums payable to a micro or small enterprise beyond the Section 15 time limit are allowed in the year of actual payment.
The MSME Samadhaan portal reported, at the time of review on 24 June 2026, 108,900 total delayed-payment cases filed in MSEFC and INR 31,447.06 crore as amount payable. That figure shows why written due dates, acceptance records, and ledger reconciliation are material in distributor credit management.
Indian compliance considerations for manufacturer-distributor credit terms.
| Compliance area | Practical rule for distributors | Source / verification note |
|---|---|---|
| MSME delayed-payment framework | Keep payment terms within legal limits where the supplier is a micro or small enterprise | Ministry of MSME, Samadhaan delayed-payment portal |
| 45-day payment ceiling | Do not treat long informal credit as safe when MSME rules apply | Ministry of MSME states buyer liability if payment is not made within 45 days of acceptance |
| Interest exposure | Delayed payment may attract compound interest with monthly rests at three times the RBI bank rate | Ministry of MSME Samadhaan portal, Section 16 summary |
| Income-tax deduction timing | Late payment beyond the MSMED Act time limit can affect deduction timing under Section 43B(h) | Income Tax Department guidance page |
| GST documentation | Match PO, invoice, e-way bill, dispatch, delivery, and payment records | Confirm current GST compliance with a tax professional |
| Export documentation | Align invoice, packing list, certificate, LC/CAD/DP/DA terms, freight, insurance, and destination requirements | Confirm per shipment and destination country |
1.9 What process should a distributor follow to request credit from a manufacturer?
A distributor should request credit only after preparing a complete commercial file: company details, expected monthly purchases, territory, order history, references, payment mode, requested credit days, and proposed credit limit. A vague request for “dealer credit” is weaker than a structured request with numbers.
Recommended process for requesting manufacturer credit as an established distributor.
| Step | Distributor action | Manufacturer output | Typical result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Share company profile and intended product categories | Account screening | Eligibility to proceed |
| 2 | Submit GST/PAN/IEC, address, bank, references, and authorized signatory | Documentation review | Clean vendor/customer master setup |
| 3 | Place first order on advance or proforma basis | Trial order processing | Payment and dispatch behavior established |
| 4 | Build 2-3 paid-order history | Ledger review | Consideration for Net 15 or partial credit |
| 5 | Request specific credit limit and term in writing | Credit approval or counter-offer | Written cap and payment date |
| 6 | Sign distributor or credit agreement if required | Formal credit activation | Clear rules for overdue, warranty, returns, and suspension |
| 7 | Maintain monthly ledger reconciliation | Credit continuity | Reduced disputes and faster dispatch |
| 8 | Request term increase only after clean payment cycles | Periodic review | Possible upgrade to Net 30 or limited Net 45 |
For Jainco Lab categories, a distributor can use the Tenders / OEM page for bulk, project, OEM, and tender-linked enquiries, and can reference relevant product groups such as educational laboratory apparatus, physics lab equipment, maths lab equipment, laboratory equipment, and lab supplies.
1.10 What happens if a distributor misses the due date?
A missed due date can lead to credit hold, suspension of dispatch, withdrawal of credit days, interest or late-payment charges where agreed, and a requirement to return to advance payment. Manufacturers should use a predictable escalation process rather than ad hoc decisions.
Practical overdue-payment escalation model for distributor accounts.
| Delay stage | Manufacturer action | Distributor remedy | Credit impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-7 days overdue | Payment reminder and ledger copy | Confirm payment date and reconcile deductions | Warning only if rare |
| 8-15 days overdue | Temporary hold on new dispatch | Pay overdue invoice and share proof | Net term may be reduced |
| 16-30 days overdue | Credit review and senior approval for any new order | Clear overdue balance before dispatch | Credit cap may be frozen |
| More than 30 days overdue | Move to advance payment or legal/commercial recovery route | Settlement plan and written commitment | Credit facility may be withdrawn |
| Repeated delays | Account reclassification | Rebuild history through advance orders | Long-term credit eligibility reduced |
1.11 How can distributors improve credit eligibility?
Distributors improve credit eligibility by paying on time, reconciling ledgers monthly, submitting clean purchase orders, avoiding last-minute changes, forecasting demand, and separating end-customer delays from manufacturer payment obligations. Credit trust is built through predictable operations, not only purchase volume.
A strong distributor should maintain:
- A clean ageing report with no unresolved debit notes.
- Written acceptance of invoice due dates before dispatch.
- Standard PO format with GST, shipping, contact, and payment details.
- A realistic sales forecast for the next 3-6 months.
- Fast communication if a payment issue is expected.
- Clear distinction between warranty claims, freight damage, and payment obligations.
- Product category focus that matches the manufacturer’s strengths.
For Jainco Lab, distributors should align enquiries to specific categories instead of sending generic requests. A category-specific enquiry, such as laboratory equipment for schools, physics lab apparatus, or maths lab kits, is easier to evaluate than an open-ended requirement.
1.12 Common Mistakes / Pitfalls
1.12.1 Mistake 1: Asking for Net 45 before proving payment discipline
A distributor should not request Net 45 terms on the first order. A safer path is advance payment for initial orders, then Net 15 or Net 30 after clean payment cycles.
1.12.2 Mistake 2: Treating end-customer delay as a reason to delay manufacturer payment
Manufacturer credit is not the same as tender payment collection. A distributor should not pass the buyer’s delay to the manufacturer unless the arrangement is explicitly written and accepted.
1.12.3 Mistake 3: Mixing warranty disputes with invoice payment
Warranty claims, shortages, freight damage, and invoice due dates should be tracked separately. Holding a full invoice for a small replacement issue damages credit confidence.
1.12.4 Mistake 4: Requesting credit without a written cap
A credit term without a credit limit creates ambiguity. Every approved account should state maximum exposure, due date basis, review cycle, and suspension trigger.
1.12.5 Mistake 5: Ignoring MSME delayed-payment rules
When MSME provisions apply, delayed payment may create interest exposure and tax-deduction timing issues. Buyers should verify legal and tax obligations before agreeing to long payment cycles.
1.13 Related Guides
- Laboratory Equipment Supplier in India
- Science Laboratory Equipment Supplier in India
- Science Lab Equipment Manufacturers in India
- Essential Physics Lab Instruments for CBSE and ICSE Schools
- Which Analytical Laboratory Equipment is Right for Your Laboratory?
- Lab Glassware Manufacturer in India Powering Practical Experiments in Modern Classrooms
1.14 Frequently Asked Questions
1.14.1 1. Do established distributors usually get Net 30 from manufacturers?
Established distributors may receive Net 30 if they have repeat order history, clean payment records, verified business documents, and an approved credit limit. Net 30 is usually not automatic for first orders. Many manufacturers begin with advance payment or partial advance, then upgrade the distributor after 2-3 successful paid orders. For bulk or OEM enquiries, use the Jainco Lab Tenders / OEM page and ask for written terms on the quotation.
1.14.2 2. Can a distributor request Net 45 payment terms in India?
A distributor can request Net 45 terms, but the manufacturer should verify whether MSME delayed-payment rules apply and whether the distributor’s risk profile supports the longer term. The Ministry of MSME’s Samadhaan portal states buyer liability if payment to a micro or small enterprise is not made within 45 days of acceptance of goods or services. Legal and tax review is recommended before approving long informal credit.
1.14.3 3. Are advance payments still required for established distributors?
Advance payments may still be required for custom, OEM, export, tender-specific, fragile, or high-value orders even when the distributor has an established account. Credit terms are usually easier for regular catalogue products than for made-to-order products. A manufacturer may ask for a customization deposit, tooling advance, or LC for export shipments to control non-cancellable production risk.
1.14.4 4. What is the safest payment term for a new distributor?
The safest payment term for a new distributor is proforma or advance payment for the first order, followed by partial advance or Net 15 only after clean payment history is built. This protects the manufacturer while the distributor proves order quality, payment behavior, and resale seriousness. After several successful transactions, the distributor can request Net 30 with a defined credit limit.
1.14.5 5. What documents are required for distributor credit approval?
Distributor credit approval usually requires a credit application, legal business name, GST/PAN or relevant tax registration, bank details, purchase-order format, trade references, and financial or turnover proof for higher limits. Export distributors may also need IEC, SWIFT/banking details, shipping documents, and destination-country information. A written distributor agreement is recommended for recurring credit accounts.
1.14.6 6. What is the difference between a distributor discount and distributor credit?
A distributor discount reduces the selling price, while distributor credit extends the time allowed for payment after invoice, dispatch, or delivery. A distributor can have a discount without open credit, and a distributor can have credit without a larger discount. Manufacturers should approve discount and credit separately because margin and payment risk are different decisions.
1.15 Key Takeaways
- Established distributors commonly receive structured credit such as Net 15, Net 30, or limited Net 45, but the term should be written on the quotation or agreement.
- A manufacturer should approve distributor credit only after checking payment history, business identity, documentation quality, order type, and financial capacity.
- The Ministry of MSME Samadhaan portal reported 108,900 total MSEFC cases filed and INR 31,447.06 crore as amount payable when reviewed on 24 June 2026, showing why due-date control matters in B2B supply.
- The Jainco Lab Tenders / OEM page is the appropriate starting point for bulk, OEM, and distributor enquiries that need written commercial terms.
- Product categories such as laboratory equipment, lab supplies, and physics lab equipment should be specified clearly when requesting distributor terms.
- Distributor credit should be reviewed periodically because overdue invoices, custom orders, export risk, and tender delays can change the approved credit limit.
1.16 About Jainco Lab
Jainco Lab is an Ambala Cantt, Haryana-based educational and laboratory equipment manufacturer and exporter. The official website states that Jainco Lab was founded in 1982, supplies educational and laboratory scientific equipment to schools, colleges, universities, laboratories, governments, hospitals, and international aid agencies, and operates a 15,000 square meter factory. The website also states that the organization is ISO 9001, ISO 14001, CE, WHO-GMP, ISO 13485-2003, Directive 93/42/EEC, and United Nations-related certified for educational science and math kits. These certificate claims should be re-verified from current certificate copies before tender use.