Jun 27, 2021 11:51:59 AM by Sara S
Solved! Go to Solution.
Jun 27, 2021 12:23:23 PM by NikolaS N
Hi Sara,
If you are working with a client and they become unresponsive for a long period of time, it may be best to stop working on the project and wait for contact from the client. In some cases, you may also reach out to Upwork to contact the client on your behalf.
On a fixed-price contract, ending the contract forfeits any funds remaining in escrow. Instead, it is often best to complete your last milestone before you end the contract. If your client fails to respond to your submission, funds will be automatically released after 14 days. If they respond but refuse the work and you believe you have completed the work according to the agreed terms, you have the option to file a dispute.
You can find more information in this help article.
Jul 5, 2022 07:13:26 AM by Annie Jane B
Hi Atif,
Thank you for reaching out to us. If you are working with a client and they become unresponsive for a long period of time, it may be best to stop working on the project and wait for contact from the client. In some cases, you may also reach out to Upwork to contact the client on your behalf.
As for the unresponsive client, we generally recommend that you complete your last milestone, submit the work for payment and still try to get in touch with your client in order to leave a good impression. If your client fails to respond to your submission, we will automatically release the funds after 14 days.
Jul 5, 2022 07:44:33 AM by Atif M
Thanks Annie for a prompt response.
As per my scenario, I created the milestone after submission of work. This is manual submission in messages only.
Now, its more than a month and I contacted several times but getting no response from the client.
Can you please guide me with my current scenario what I should do ?
My pending amount is more than $900.
Thanks
Jul 5, 2022 08:24:08 AM by Christine A
If the client never approved nor funded the milestone, then there is no way for Upwork to release it to you. If the client isn't responding to you, then they probably won't respond to Upwork either. You should never work on an unfunded milestone.
Jul 5, 2022 08:37:44 AM by Atif M
Thanks Christine.
Fully agreed with your advice.
Client is big and have more than 200k spending.
Currently, client also have 33 active hires.
In this case, client must reply to the upwork ?
What's your opinion on this please ?
Thanks
Jul 5, 2022 08:49:10 AM by Christine A
My opinion is that Upwork will tell you what I've just told you - if there's no funded milestone, you shouldn't work. If this is a big client and they were paying you regularly before, maybe something happened to them - an accident or illness. But if that's the case, Upwork still can't charge them for unapproved work. Do they have active projects that started recently?
Jul 5, 2022 09:33:16 AM by Atif M
You are right
Yes, client has active project with approximately three dozen active hires.
Should I request upwork to just contact the client on my behalf or should absorb this injection ?
Thanks
Jul 5, 2022 12:53:22 PM by Preston H
re: "Should I request upwork to just contact the client on my behalf or should absorb this injection ?"
My advice is to never ask Upwork to contact a client on your behalf. It will not benefit you if you try to do that.
You would be wasting your time.
If you worked on an unfunded milestone, that is your mistake. Upwork can't fix that.
Jul 12, 2022 04:18:08 PM by Tamuka M
Hi Annie I have a situation with a client who asked me to do edits for fixed contracts for which I charged him extra and he agreed. Instead of funding $304 into the Escrow he funded only $70 and disappered and the status is Active The submit work for payment button is not Active. I have posted before and I am not quite satisfied withnthe responses I am getting here people have generalized the answer and I have seen the mistake I made.
1) The client funded the Bonus and just disappered is there a way for that bonus to be paid into my account its active but I dont see how it can be paid to my account.
2) Can upwork contact the client on my behalf on this matter I have read some article that say upwork can offer such a service, How do I do that? I had a meeting with the client at the start of the project on skype so I havent spoken to him since ius it okay if I send him a message regarding this situation.
3) I seems as if upwork has a feature to where one can turn off his online status even if they are online does not that encourage fraudulent activies as in my case with this client.
Jul 12, 2022 04:58:09 PM by Preston H
re: "I seems as if upwork has a feature to where one can turn off his online status even if they are online does not that encourage fraudulent activies as in my case with this client."
I am nearly always online on Upwork. I ALWAYS keep me status set to "offline."
This is not "fraudulent."
In my opinion, no Upwork freelancer should be looking at "online status" indicators. I refer to these as "stalker dots."
Jul 12, 2022 04:00:12 AM by Muhammad A
I spent hours working on a fixed-price project for 3 different clients and completed and sent them the work. but has not approved my payment request yet, and it has been over 3 days. They are not responding to me either.
Jul 12, 2022 06:06:45 AM by Annie Jane B
Hi Muhammad,
I'm sorry to hear about your experience. If you are working with a client and they become unresponsive for a long period of time, it may be best to stop working on the project and wait for contact from the client. In some cases, you may also reach out to Upwork to contact the client on your behalf.
On a fixed-price contract, ending the contract forfeits any funds remaining in escrow. Instead, it is often best to complete your last milestone before you end the contract. If your client fails to respond to your submission, funds will be automatically released after 14 days. If they respond but refuse the work and you believe you have completed the work according to the agreed terms, you have the option to file a dispute.
You can find more information in this help article.
Jul 12, 2022 02:58:58 PM by Muhammad A
I've completed my work and also submitted it to the client he also likes the work but when I request payment he becomes unresponsive.
Jul 12, 2022 08:03:03 AM by Muhammad R
I'm working with a rather new/amateur client who just joined Upwork. He was already bargaining when it came to deciding a fee for the work I was going to do. We settled on a price and I worked hard for 10 days. I submitted before time. He knows I have uploaded the submission as he messaged me after I submitted. But has disappeared on me for 5 days now. Is it remotely possible for him to just download the files I sent and cancel the contract later on? Or does Upwork forbid him from doing this?
I know there's a 14 day period IF the client doesn't respond. But what happens if he just decides to cancel the contract? Is their any protection that Upwork provides in this case?
Jul 12, 2022 03:39:35 PM by Annie Jane B
Hi Muhammad,
Thank you for reaching out to us. On a fixed-price contract, ending the contract forfeits any funds remaining in escrow. Instead, it is often best to complete your last milestone before you end the contract. If your client fails to respond to your submission, funds will be automatically released after 14 days. If they respond but refuse the work and you believe you have completed the work according to the agreed terms, you have the option to file a dispute.
You can find more information in this help article.
Jul 13, 2022 08:51:23 AM by Muhammad R
Thank you for the reply. And just to iron out this little confusion - will the complete amount be released or only the amount in escrow? So for example - if the fee we discussed was $50 and $15 is in escrow, which of these will I get?
Thank you, again.
Jul 13, 2022 01:55:12 PM by Preston H
re: "So for example - if the fee we discussed was $50 and $15 is in escrow, which of these will I get?"
You get $15
Jul 13, 2022 02:07:23 PM by Annie Jane B
Hi Muhammad,
Preston is correct. Only the amount in escrow will be released.
Aug 2, 2022 09:18:56 AM by Mwende N
I have a client who has been unresponsive for almost a week after I submitted the work. I often see her online but does not respond to my texts. Kindly advise on what step to take. Thank you.
Aug 2, 2022 02:08:49 PM Edited Aug 2, 2022 02:09:43 PM by Annie Jane B
Hi Mwende,
Thank you for reaching out to us. Your client may have times when they do not respond or communicate as quickly as usual for many reasons — busy on several projects, technical issues, a family emergency, etc. However, if you are working with a client and they become unresponsive for a long period of time, you may want to stop working on the project and wait for a response.
On a fixed-price contract, if you end the contract, you forfeit any funds that remain in escrow. Instead, we recommend that you complete your last milestone and submit the work for payment before you end the contract. If your client fails to respond to your submission, we will automatically release the funds after 14 days. If they respond but refuse the work and you believe that you have completed the work according to the agreed terms, you have the option to file a dispute.
Aug 2, 2022 03:21:09 PM by Mwende N
Hello AJ,
Thank you for your response, however, the client had divided the work into 2 milestones, and only funded 1, whereas I completed the whole workload and sent her. What does this mean?
Aug 27, 2022 08:07:04 AM by Ranjit H
My client doesn't give me an answer. I have completed the work . i am wait 14 days my blance not add why ?
Aug 27, 2022 12:57:05 PM Edited Aug 27, 2022 12:58:24 PM by Annie Jane B
Hi Shuvoraj,
Thank you for reaching out to us. I checked this for you and found that the client was asking for revision but it looks like you did not click on "Submit Revision" hence no funds were released.
You can check this article for more information.
Also, when your client becomes unresponsive for a long period of time, it may be best to stop working on the project and wait for contact from the client. In some cases, you may also reach out to Upwork to contact the client on your behalf.