Collecting class fees — how to start without losing a weekend
A step-by-step first collection: deciding the amount, writing the message, chasing the stragglers, and closing the books. Works for 5 parents or 35.
A step-by-step first collection: deciding the amount, writing the message, chasing the stragglers, and closing the books. Works for 5 parents or 35.
Your first class collection is the hardest one. Not because it's complicated — it isn't — but because you haven't done it before and you're not sure what "done well" looks like. This post is a walkthrough of a real collection from start to finish: a £15 zoo trip for 28 kids. By the end you'll know exactly what to say, what to press, and when to stop.
The single biggest mistake on a first collection is announcing it with a range. "About £15 per child." Don't. You will spend the next five days answering "is it £15 or £20?" in the group chat.
Do the maths first:
Round to a clean number. £14.60 is not a clean number. £15 is. Parents will transfer £15 without thinking. They will not transfer £14.60 without first writing to ask "can I round up?"
This is the message that goes out:
Zoo trip, Friday 14 April — £15 per child Deadline: Friday 7 April Please transfer to bank account 12 3456 7890 (name: Anna Nowak) with the reference "Zoo — child's first name". If a transfer isn't easy for you, just let me know — we'll sort something out. Any questions, message me directly, not the group.
Notice what this message does:
Most parents pay in the first 48 hours. Don't send any follow-ups during this window. You will look like a nag. Let the deadline do its work.
Use this time to set up the "who paid" list. If you're on ClassKasa, that's automatic — paid parents move from "remaining" to "paid" as their transfers land. If you're on a spreadsheet, create one now:
Tick as transfers arrive. Don't trust your memory.
Around day 3 or 4, if less than 70% have paid, one gentle nudge is fair:
Friendly reminder, zoo deadline is Friday. Bank details in the pinned message. Ignore if you've already paid.
That "ignore if you've already paid" line is gold. It tells the six parents who paid on day one that they don't need to worry. Without it, they wonder if you lost track and they'll reply in DM, which costs you twenty minutes to reassure them.
On the morning of the deadline, check the list. For anyone still unpaid, send a single group reminder:
Zoo deadline is today. If you haven't paid yet, please do so by end of day so I can confirm numbers with the teacher.
"So I can confirm numbers with the teacher" is the magic clause — it gives a reason beyond your own convenience. Parents respond to that.
If the next morning you've still got four unpaid, DM each one individually:
Hi [name], quick reminder about the zoo collection — £15, account 12 3456 7890. Do you need me to send the details again, or is everything OK at your end?
Notice what this message does NOT do:
Of those four parents, three will pay within a day. The fourth will ask for an extra week, which you grant, because class collections are not a court of law.
Once everyone has paid:
All paid! Thanks everyone. Total collected: £420 (28 × £15). Teacher has been given cash, I'll let you know if there's anything left over after the trip.
This message is the whole reason people trust you to do this again. Transparency makes the next collection 10x easier.
If you're running more than one or two collections a year, a tool pays for itself. The maths is simple: a good tool saves you about 30 minutes per collection on chasing, reconciling, and closing. At six collections a year, that's three hours. At fifteen, it's more than a full working day.
ClassKasa is that tool. It handles the announcement, the reminders, the payment tracking, and the year-end summary. One class is free; more than one is £5/month and comes out of the class account if you want it to.