For B2B finance teams, automating accounts receivable in NetSuite is less about turning on one feature and more about connecting the right workflows so invoicing, collections, reconciliation, and reporting run with less manual effort. In practice, that usually means standardizing how invoices are created, setting up dunning, using bank and payment-application tools to reduce reconciliation work, and giving finance leaders a real-time view of aging and DSO inside NetSuite. For suppliers that also extend payment terms to buyers, the next step is often layering in a platform like Resolve AR automation, Resolve Net Terms, and Resolve integrations to connect credit, collections, reconciliation, and cash flow in one system.
That matters because many AR teams still spend too much time on repetitive work: creating invoices from sales activity, following up on overdue balances, matching incoming payments, and building weekly aging reports by hand. NetSuite can automate much of that foundation. What it does not do on its own is remove the cash flow delay that comes with offering net terms to B2B buyers.
This guide walks through a practical NetSuite AR automation setup for 2026: what to prepare first, how native NetSuite workflows fit together, where Oracle’s dunning and reporting tools come in, and when it makes sense to extend the stack with Resolve so you can get paid faster while preserving a net terms experience for buyers.
NetSuite AR automation works best when you standardize billing, configure dunning, reduce payment-matching friction, and surface live aging metrics to the team. For B2B suppliers offering net terms, NetSuite integration with Resolve can extend that workflow by adding credit decisioning, receivables automation, and faster payment to the supplier while buyers retain their payment window.
To automate accounts receivable in NetSuite, build these five layers in sequence:
NetSuite accounts receivable automation is the process of using native ERP workflows, SuiteApps, and connected finance tools to reduce repetitive work across your order-to-cash cycle. Instead of relying on a finance analyst to create every invoice, send each reminder, apply every payment manually, and build aging reports from scratch, your team defines the workflow once and manages exceptions.
For B2B suppliers with net-30, net-60, or longer terms, that matters because the operational burden of AR grows quickly as invoice count increases. Automation reduces the manual work around receivables. When you also want to improve cash flow timing, platforms like Resolve can sit alongside NetSuite to help automate credit, collections, reconciliation, and buyer-facing payment workflows.
Most NetSuite AR automation issues start with workflow design and data quality, not the automation layer itself.
Before configuring anything, confirm the following are in place:
If you plan to add net terms on top of native automation, it also helps to define that architecture early. Resolve’s integrations are designed to fit into ERP, accounting, and ecommerce workflows so AR automation does not become another disconnected process.
Invoice automation starts with the billing workflow you use today.
NetSuite supports billing sales orders through its native sales and billing workflow. In general, invoicing depends on whether you use Advanced Shipping. Without Advanced Shipping, fulfillment and billing can occur together. With Advanced Shipping enabled, fulfillment and billing are separate steps, so teams usually invoice through the sales-order billing workflow rather than relying on a single “auto-generate invoice” preference.
That makes the first real task standardization:
For finance teams trying to reduce manual touches, the biggest win is consistency. A standardized billing workflow produces cleaner invoices, fewer corrections, and less downstream reconciliation work. That is especially important if you later connect invoice automation costs to a larger AR efficiency project.
If your contracts require staged or recurring invoices, use billing schedules. NetSuite supports billing schedules for sales orders and recurring billing logic, which is typically the right foundation for subscription-style or milestone-based AR workflows.
A simple approach is:
If your company has ASC 606 or IFRS 15 requirements, use NetSuite’s Advanced Revenue Management workflow instead of relying on a generic “SuiteRevRec” label or a custom workaround. The revenue-recognition setup should stay aligned with how you bill and fulfill.
For overdue invoices, NetSuite’s native dunning framework is one of the most useful AR automation tools available. Oracle’s Dunning Overview and related setup documents show that the Dunning Letters SuiteApp supports automated procedures, escalation levels, templates, and assignments to customers, invoices, or invoice groups.
A common B2B setup includes:
|
Level |
Trigger |
Tone |
Action |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Level 1 |
Near due date |
Friendly |
Reminder email |
|
Level 2 |
7-10 days overdue |
Direct |
Past-due notice |
|
Level 3 |
15-20 days overdue |
Escalation |
Reminder to billing and AP contacts |
|
Level 4 |
30+ days overdue |
Review stage |
Collections review or internal escalation |
The goal is not to send more reminders for the sake of it. The goal is to make follow-up timely and consistent so invoices do not slip simply because no one got to them this week.
Payment application is often where AR teams lose hours every week. Incoming ACH, wire, and check activity does not always arrive with perfect remittance data, so invoice matching gets delayed.
NetSuite’s Bank Feeds SuiteApp can bring bank data into NetSuite daily, and Oracle’s accounting-preferences guidance supports payment-application logic for transactions missing invoice numbers. That makes native matching more useful, especially when paired with better remittance habits and clean customer records.
This is an area where native automation helps, but real-world results still depend on your remittance quality. For many B2B suppliers, that is also the point where a connected receivables platform becomes valuable. Resolve positions this as part of a broader workflow that can automate credit, invoicing, reminders, branded payment collection, and reconciliation from one environment through Resolve AR automation.
Automation is only useful if the team can see what is happening.
NetSuite’s A/R Aging Detail and aging summary reports are the core reporting layer for AR visibility. NetSuite also supports a DSO metric and dashboard KPIs, which helps finance leaders track whether workflow changes are actually reducing collection time.
If your team is tracking collections improvement, DSO guide and reconciliation stats can help frame the operational impact inside a broader AR improvement initiative.
Native NetSuite is strongest when your team wants structured ERP-based AR controls without introducing another standalone workflow too early.
|
Capability |
Native NetSuite |
Best use case |
|---|---|---|
|
Sales-order billing workflow |
Strong |
Standard invoice creation tied to fulfillment or billing schedules |
|
Dunning procedures |
Strong |
Automated reminder cadence for overdue receivables |
|
A/R aging and DSO visibility |
Strong |
Reporting and weekly collections management |
|
Bank data import |
Useful |
Reducing manual reconciliation work |
|
Buyer credit underwriting |
Not native |
Requires separate process or connected platform |
|
Net terms financing |
Not native |
Requires a connected solution |
For many teams, native NetSuite is the right first step. But once you want to automate buyer credit decisions, offer net terms with less risk exposure, or improve cash timing rather than just collections process, you usually need a connected platform.
The timeline depends more on workflow cleanup than on clicking through setup screens.
|
Phase |
Typical focus |
What happens |
|---|---|---|
|
Phase 1 |
Process review |
Validate billing model, customer data, roles, and current AR gaps |
|
Phase 2 |
Core setup |
Standardize invoice workflow, dunning, payment handling, and dashboards |
|
Phase 3 |
Testing |
Run test invoices, reminders, payment scenarios, and report outputs |
|
Phase 4 |
Go-live |
Move the team to the new workflow and monitor exceptions closely |
|
Phase 5 |
Extension |
Add Resolve if you want net terms, faster supplier payment, and connected receivables operations |
Multi-entity environments, custom billing logic, and more complex reconciliation needs will extend the project. The cleaner your source data and workflow ownership, the faster the rollout goes.
NetSuite can automate receivables operations, but it does not remove the cash-flow delay that comes from letting buyers pay later. That is where Resolve fits.
Resolve’s platform is built to help merchants grow B2B sales, get paid faster, and reduce risk by streamlining net terms, receivables, and payments. Based on the Resolve context document, Resolve supports AI-driven credit workflows, automated reconciliation, reminders, collections support, branded payment options, and integrations across ERP, accounting, and commerce systems. It also supports non-recourse advances and net terms workflows for approved customers.
For NetSuite users, NetSuite integration and ERP-native net terms are the most relevant next steps. Instead of treating AR automation and working-capital strategy as separate projects, Resolve helps connect them.
Duplicate customer names, missing billing contacts, and inconsistent terms create downstream issues in both dunning and payment application.
Invoice automation depends on how orders are fulfilled and billed. If that process is inconsistent, the automation layer will also be inconsistent.
Collections automation should feel deliberate, not accidental. Timing, language, and recipient routing matter.
Payment matching improves over time as remittance quality and internal rules improve. Exception management is part of the workflow.
NetSuite can reduce manual work and improve follow-up. If your buyers still pay on extended terms, the cash gap still exists. That is why many B2B suppliers pair NetSuite with net terms guide thinking and a platform like Resolve.
With the right layers in place, NetSuite becomes the operating system for receivables execution:
|
Stage |
What’s automated |
Manual work remaining |
|---|---|---|
|
Billing |
Standardized invoice creation |
Exceptions, contract changes, template updates |
|
Collections |
Scheduled dunning procedures |
Escalated account review |
|
Payment handling |
Bank data import and payment-application support |
Partial-payment and unmatched-item review |
|
Reporting |
Aging, KPI, and DSO visibility |
Decision-making and prioritization |
|
Cash flow extension |
Resolve-based net terms workflow |
Policy and credit strategy oversight |
For B2B suppliers, that combination is what matters most: less manual AR work inside NetSuite, better visibility into receivables, and a path to faster payment when buyers still expect terms.
If your team wants to make NetSuite AR more efficient, start by standardizing billing, dunning, and reporting. If you also need to offer net terms without stretching working capital, Resolve is the logical extension.
Explore Resolve AR automation, review Resolve Net Terms, or see how Resolve integrations fit into your current finance stack.
The core pieces are billing workflow design, dunning, bank-data handling, aging reports, and DSO visibility. If your company uses recurring or milestone billing, billing schedules and revenue-management configuration also matter.
Most teams should expect a multi-step project rather than a same-day setup. The timeline depends on billing complexity, data quality, user roles, and testing requirements.
It can help by standardizing invoicing, making follow-up more consistent, and improving reporting visibility. But if your customers still pay on extended terms, NetSuite alone does not remove that wait.
No. NetSuite manages receivables workflows and reporting, but financing and buyer-credit decisions typically require a connected platform.
Resolve adds net terms, credit workflows, receivables automation, reconciliation support, and faster supplier payment on top of your ERP process. For B2B teams that want both cleaner AR operations and better cash flow timing, that is where Resolve becomes especially useful.
This post is to be used for informational purposes only and does not constitute formal legal, business, or tax advice. Each person should consult his or her own attorney, business advisor, or tax advisor with respect to matters referenced in this post. Resolve assumes no liability for actions taken in reliance upon the information contained herein.