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What Should Be in Every Independent Contractor Agreement?
Table of Contents
What Should Be in Every Independent Contractor Agreement? Scope, IP, and Risk—No Surprises
Quick Sip Takeaways ☕️
- Rule: Lock down the work, rights, and risk in that order.
- Action: Include Scope/Deliverables/Payment, IP & Confidentiality, and Status/Insurance/Indemnity/Exit every time.
- Trade‑off: A few extra lines now can save scope fights, IP drama, and surprise bills later.
You’re hiring help and want the work done right: on time, on budget, and actually yours when it’s done. Totally normal. Deep breath. ☕ Simple rule: write the agreement so a neutral stranger could run the project from it—what’s included, who owns what, and who carries which risks.
Tip 1: Nail the work and the money (so scope creep doesn’t drink your latte)
- Do: Define Scope & Deliverables with formats and acceptance criteria (for example, “Figma + source files; approved when X works on Y device”).
- Check: Set Milestones & Revisions (two rounds, response times, clear change‑order trigger).
- Ask: Tie Payment to milestones, add deposit, late fee, kill fee, and expense rules (pre‑approval).
- Backstop: Use simple Change Orders: new work → new price → new date.
- Access: State which accounts/files you provide and which tools the contractor supplies.
Bottom line: If the scope reads like a recipe, you’ll get the dish you ordered.
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready line →
“Two revisions, then change order. 40% deposit, 40% at beta, 20% at acceptance. Late >15 days = 1.5%/mo.”
Tip 2: Own what you paid for (IP) and protect what you share (confidentiality)
- Do: Use present‑tense assignment of IP (“Contractor hereby assigns all right, title, and interest…”). “Work‑for‑hire” alone is often not enough, so back it with assignment.
- Check: Require source files (code repo, design files, raw footage) and handoff timing at final payment.
- Ask: If not a full transfer, define a license (scope, term, exclusivity) and require editable assets.
- Protect: Add clear Confidentiality terms (what’s confidential, how to handle it, return/delete) and basic data security if they touch customer or employee data.
Contract Essentials (chips — vertical)
◻ Scope + acceptance criteria
◻ Milestones + change orders
◻ Payment + deposit/late/kill fees
◻ IP assignment + source files
◻ Confidentiality + data terms
Bottom line: Own the work, guard the secrets on paper before kickoff.
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready line →
“All work product and source files delivered at final payment; Contractor hereby assigns IP to Client.”
Tip 3: Get the status right, and park the risk (insurance, indemnity, exit)
- Do: Confirm Independent Contractor status (no employment, no benefits, no tax withholding; contractor controls how and when the work is done).
- Check: Ask for a COI for relevant lines like GL, professional, or auto, and set mutual indemnity: each party covers claims from its IP or negligence.
- Ask: Add a light non‑solicit so there’s no poaching of your team or customers for a short period.
- Backstop: Include Termination for cause and for convenience with pro‑rata payment and a handoff of in‑progress work. Add a cure window, governing law/venue, and (if you use it) prevailing‑party fees.
Bottom line: Status clarity, insurance, and clean exits mean fewer messes and faster fixes.
One‑Question Save: “Do we have present‑tense IP assignment and a source‑files list?” That single check rescued Nina’s launch when a designer quit mid‑handoff.
Legal Barista’s Tip (action): Paste‑ready line →
“Contractor will maintain insurance and provide a COI in 5 business days; each party indemnifies the other for its IP and negligence.”
Key Takeaways
- Write the recipe: scope, deliverables, acceptance, change orders.
- Own the result: present‑tense IP assignment plus source files and confidentiality.
- Park the risk: clear IC status, insurance/indemnity, and clean exits.
Ready to talk it through? Book a free 15‑minute Discovery Espresso with fractional counsel.
Not ready yet? Comment CONTRACT and we’ll DM the 1‑page Independent Contractor Agreement Checklist. ✅
Disclaimer: Educational only; not legal advice; no attorney–client relationship; attorney advertising. Laws vary by state and change often, confirm specifics with counsel.