Freelance Agreement — Plain-English Summary
Freelance and independent-contractor agreements blend scope, payment terms, IP ownership and liability in ways that often tilt toward the client. Paste a freelance agreement below and get a plain-English summary of the five most common red flags, the clauses typically expected on a standard version, and notes on where state law often changes the picture — in about 30 seconds. Informational only — for anything binding, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
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Five red flags we see most often in a freelance agreement
None of these are automatically deal-breakers — context and negotiating leverage matter. But if you see one on a draft, it's worth pushing back or escalating to counsel.
- 1'Work made for hire' plus broad IP assignment that captures background IP you bring into the project, not just deliverables.
- 2Unlimited revisions or 'client satisfaction' acceptance language with no objective sign-off criteria.
- 3Net-60 or Net-90 payment terms, or payment tied to milestones that the client controls unilaterally.
- 4Broad indemnification that makes the freelancer responsible for third-party IP claims even where the client directed the work.
- 5Termination-for-convenience clauses that let the client walk with no kill fee or partial-payment obligation.
Three clauses you should expect on a fair freelance agreement
If any of these are missing or written vaguely, that alone is worth asking about.
- 1A defined scope, deliverables list, and acceptance criteria.
- 2A payment schedule (deposit, milestone payments, final) with defined due dates and late-payment terms.
- 3An IP-assignment clause scoped to the deliverables, with a license to use background IP for the project.
State-specific variation on a freelance agreement
Worker-classification rules differ by state, and misclassification can expose both sides to tax and wage-law consequences. California's ABC test and other state-specific tests vary widely.
BeforeSigning is not legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. For anything binding, consult a licensed attorney in your state.
Terms to know before you read a freelance agreement
Three terms that come up repeatedly in freelance agreement drafts. Knowing these is the difference between skimming past a real issue and catching it.
- Indemnification →
An indemnification clause shifts liability — one party agrees to cover losses, damages, or legal fees the other party incurs from specified events.
- Liquidated Damages →
Liquidated damages are a pre-agreed dollar amount payable if a party breaches — commonly used when actual damages would be hard to calculate.
- Merger Clause →
A merger clause (or integration clause) states that the written contract is the complete and final agreement, overriding any prior discussions or side promises.