

A Payment Plan Agreement is a written record of a debt and a schedule for paying it off in installments over time. It sets out who owes the money, who is owed, how much is owed, and the dates and amounts of each payment until the balance is cleared.
It is not a loan agreement creating new debt. It is a structured way to repay debt that already exists.
A well-drafted payment plan agreement records six things clearly:
Payment plan agreements are commonly used for personal loans between friends or family, unpaid invoices between a business and a customer, outstanding balances after a service has been provided, and amounts owed under an earlier settlement. They are also used by small businesses offering customers a structured way to clear an overdue account, and by individuals who want a clear written record of money owed within their personal or professional network.
Putting a repayment arrangement in writing protects both sides. The debtor knows exactly what they need to pay and when, with no surprises about fees or deadlines. The creditor has a clear record of the debt, the agreed schedule, and what they can do if payments stop coming.
A written agreement also makes the arrangement easier to enforce if something goes wrong. A verbal promise to repay is hard to prove later — a signed document with dates, amounts, and consequences is not.
This template walks you through each section step by step:
1. 填写表格
填入您的詳細資料和資訊,新增日期並根據需要自訂
2. 添加您的签名
透過繪製、上傳或輸入新增具有法律約束力的簽名
3. 下載或分享
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