The Prompt Payment Act requires State agencies who acquire goods and
services, or conduct business through contractual agreements with
nongovernmental and privately-owned businesses, to pay by the
"required" payment due date for delivered goods and services.
| Problems |
Impact |
Resolution |
| Vendor's invoice not annotated with receipt date |
Using the vendor's invoice date shortens the 30 day prompt payment period |
Departments must annotate vendor invoices with receipt |
| Invoices held for dispute not documented |
Without any indication of the problems, AP must use the vendor's invoice date or departmental receipt date |
Departments must document invoice and/or receiving problems and clearly indicate the date of resolution |
| Vouchers received with multiple invoices |
Delays AP processing, increases likelihood of keying errors |
Departments must include only one invoice per voucher |
| No approving signature on voucher |
AP must return invoice to department, creating processing delays |
All vouchers must be signed before sending to AP |
| Vouchers received without correct PO# |
AP must research prior to processing, creating processing delays |
Validate PO# prior to forwarding to AP |
Vouchers received without correct documentation |
Vouchers must be sent back to dept. |
Ensure proper backup is attached |
Endowment invoices being sent to A/P with wrong coversheet |
Delays process |
Ensure Endowment voucher is correctly processed |
Vouchers received in AP without the vendor's ID numbers |
AP must research prior to processing creating processing delays |
Provide the vendor's correct ID number on all vouchers |
Vouchers received in AP with insufficient processing lead time |
Vouchers will be late |
Vouchers should be submitted to AP within one week of their receipt |
For more information on late payment interest charges, see the Commonwealth of Virginia's CAPP Manual (Topic 20315).