Published reports

TRANSPORT FOR WALES

Company number: 09476013

This information is as reported by the business, and responses are in their own words.

Reporting period:

1 October 2025 to 31 March 2026

Report filed on:

30 April 2026

Approved by:

Heather Clash


Contracts and payments

Do any of this business's construction contracts with its suppliers include retention clauses? Yes

Payment statistics

Average time taken to pay invoices: 16 days

Total value paid:

  • within 30 days: £396,052,030  (98%)
  • in 31 to 60 days: £7,806,763  (2%)
  • in 61 days or more: £1,673,325  (< 1%)

Invoices paid:

  • within 30 days: 91%
  • in 31 to 60 days: 7%
  • in 61 days or more: 2%

Late and disputed:

  • total value of payments due in the reporting period which have not been paid within the agreed period: £15,468,117
  • payments due in the reporting period which have not been paid within the agreed period: 12%
  • not made in the reporting period due to a dispute: 0%

Payment terms

Shortest standard payment periods

28 days

Longest standard payment period

Answer not provided

Standard payment terms

It is the company's policy to agree appropriate payment terms with suppliers and to honour those payment terms based on the timely receipt of valid invoices. The company's standard payment terms are 28 days from receipt of invoice. In some instances, we contract with suppliers on their own payment terms which are usually less than the company's standard of 28 days from receipt of invoice. Wherever these differences arise, and so long they are stated within a mutually signed contract, we seek to honour to the supplier's own payment terms following the timely receipt of valid invoices.

Were there any changes to the standard payment terms in the reporting period?

No

Were suppliers notified or consulted about these changes before they were made?

N/A

Maximum contractual payment period agreed

60 days

No further comment provided

Any other information about payment terms

No further comment provided

Retention clauses

How does this business use retention clauses?

Retention clauses are used in specific circumstances:

Only on projects with specific cost control requirements from external clients/stakeholders

Does this business only use retention clauses in construction contracts above a specific contract sum?

No

Does this business use a standard percentage rate in retention clauses?

No

Does this business apply retention clause practices that are no more onerous than those applied to it on the same project?

No

Releasing money under a retention clause

Process for releasing money this business has deducted or retained under a retention clause

Our retention clauses are on a case-by-case basis - current clauses are released on Completion of the Whole of the Works and then at the issuing of the Defects Certificate

Is the money released in stages?

Yes:

Our retention clauses are on a case-by-case basis - current clauses released 50% at Completion, the remainder at Defects Certificate

Amount retained from suppliers in the reporting period

Amount retained stated as a percentage of the money retained from this business by its clients

0%

Amount retained stated as a percentage of the total construction payments made by this business

0%

Dispute resolution process

The company seeks to deal with all suppliers in a fair and reasonable manner, aiming to proactively respond to and address queries and/or challenges as soon as they arise. In the event that a financial dispute cannot be resolved by the Transport for Wales Purchase Ledger Team, it would then be escalated to the management team within the finance department. In the event of a contractual dispute, such as the delivery of obligations and/or performance, individual project teams are responsible for addressing it in the first instance, with escalated support provided by the Contract Management Team. Further support is also provided by the Supply Chain Team where multiple disputes become a common practice with any single supplier.

Please note that our Percentage of payments not made in the reporting period due to a dispute as disclosed above includes only those contracts which have entered into a formal contractual dispute process. A common reason for invoices being paid late is because of informal queries or disagreements regarding amount or evidence to support the invoice – however we are unable to include this in our reporting, as our finance system does not record this data.

Other payment information

Has this business signed up to a code of conduct or standards on payment practices? If so, which?

For example, signatories to The Fair Payment Code must commit to paying 95% of their invoices within 60 days.

No, this business has not signed up to a code of conduct or standards on payment practices.

Does this business offer e-invoicing in relation to qualifying contracts?

This is where suppliers can electronically submit and track invoices. It's not just allowing suppliers to email them an invoice.

No

Does this business offer supply chain finance?

This is where a supplier who has submitted an invoice can be paid by a third-party finance provider earlier than the agreed payment date. The business would then pay the finance provider the invoiced sum.

No

Under its payment practices and policies, can this business deduct sums from payments under qualifying contracts as a charge for remaining on a supplier list?

No

During the reporting period, did the business deduct sums from payments as a charge for remaining on a supplier list?

No