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SERVICE AGREEMENT

This Service Agreement ("Agreement") is entered into on [Date] between:

CLIENT: [Client Name/Company], located at [Client Address], ID/Tax Number: [ID/Tax Number] ("Client")

SERVICE PROVIDER: [Provider Name/Company], located at [Provider Address], ID/Tax Number: [ID/Tax Number] ("Provider")

ARTICLE 1: SCOPE OF WORK

1.1 Services. Provider agrees to perform the following services:

[Detailed Description of Services]

1.2 Deliverables. Provider shall deliver the following:

  • [Deliverable 1]
  • [Deliverable 2]
  • [Deliverable 3]

1.3 Quality Standards. All work shall meet professional industry standards and the following specifications: [Quality Standards/Specifications]

1.4 Exclusions. The following are NOT included in this Agreement: [List Exclusions]

ARTICLE 2: TIMELINE AND MILESTONES

2.1 Start Date. Work shall commence on [Start Date].

2.2 Completion Date. Final delivery shall be completed by [Completion Date].

2.3 Milestones. The following milestones shall be met:

  • [Milestone 1] - Due: [Date]
  • [Milestone 2] - Due: [Date]
  • [Milestone 3] - Due: [Date]

ARTICLE 3: COMPENSATION AND PAYMENT

3.1 Contract Price. Client agrees to pay Provider a total of [Total Amount] ([Amount in Words]) for the services described herein.

Payment structure (check one):

☐ Fixed Price: Full amount due upon completion

☐ Milestone Payments:

  • Upon signing: [Amount]
  • Upon [Milestone]: [Amount]
  • Upon completion: [Amount]

☐ Hourly Rate: [Rate] per hour, not to exceed [Maximum Amount]

3.2 Payment Terms. Payment shall be made within [Number] days of invoice via [Payment Method].

3.3 Late Payment. Payments not received within the specified period shall incur a late fee of [Percentage]% per month or the maximum allowed by law.

3.4 Expenses. (Check one):

All expenses included in contract price

Client reimburses approved expenses with receipts

ARTICLE 4: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

4.1 Ownership. (Check one):

☐ Work for Hire: Client owns all rights upon full payment. Provider transfers all copyright, trademark, and other intellectual property rights to Client.

☐ Licensed Work: Provider retains ownership and grants Client a [Non-Exclusive/Exclusive] license to use the work for [Purpose].

4.2 Portfolio Use. Provider may display completed work in portfolio unless Client objects in writing.

4.3 Pre-Existing Materials. Provider retains all rights to pre-existing materials, tools, and methodologies used in creating the work.

ARTICLE 5: REVISIONS AND ACCEPTANCE

5.1 Review Period. Client shall have [Number] business days to review deliverables and request revisions or approve.

5.2 Included Revisions. Provider shall provide up to [Number] rounds of revisions at no additional charge for minor adjustments within the original scope.

5.3 Additional Revisions. Revisions beyond the included rounds or outside the original scope shall be billed at [Hourly Rate] per hour.

5.4 Deemed Acceptance. If Client does not respond within the review period, the deliverable shall be deemed accepted and payment shall become due.

ARTICLE 6: INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR

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Service Agreement: A Guide for Freelancers and Clients

What is a Service Agreement?

A Service Agreement is a legally binding contract between a service provider (contractor, freelancer, or consultant) and a client where the provider agrees to complete specific work in exchange for payment upon completion or according to milestones.

Key Difference from Employment:

  • Employment Contract: Hired for labor, paid by time, under supervision
  • Service Agreement: Hired for results, paid upon completion, operates independently

Essential Components

1. The Parties

  • Client: The person or company hiring the service
  • Service Provider: Freelancer, contractor, or consultant performing the work

2. Scope of Work

Must be clearly defined:

  • Detailed description of services
  • Quality standards and specifications
  • Quantity or units of work
  • Acceptance criteria
  • What is NOT included (exclusions)

3. Timeline

  • Project start date
  • Delivery deadline
  • Milestones for multi-phase projects
  • Revision period
  • Extensions and delays

4. Compensation

Fixed Price: Single payment upon completion

Milestone Payments: Payments based on progress

  • 30% upon signing
  • 40% at midpoint
  • 30% upon completion

Per Unit: Payment per deliverable

Hourly/Daily Rate: Payment based on time spent

5. Payment Terms

  • Deposit (if applicable)
  • Payment schedule
  • Payment method (transfer, check, wire)
  • Late payment penalties
  • Withholding taxes (if applicable)

Rights and Obligations

Service Provider's Obligations

  1. Performance: Complete work according to specifications
  2. Timeline: Meet agreed deadlines
  3. Quality: Deliver work meeting standards
  4. Communication: Provide progress updates
  5. Confidentiality: Protect client information
  6. Cooperation: Work collaboratively with client
  7. Corrections: Fix defects within warranty period

Client's Obligations

  1. Payment: Pay according to schedule
  2. Cooperation: Provide necessary information
  3. Timely Response: Review and approve work promptly
  4. Access: Provide required access to systems/data
  5. Clear Direction: Communicate requirements clearly

Service Provider's Rights

  1. Payment for completed work
  2. Reasonable time to perform
  3. Clear specifications
  4. Timely client feedback
  5. Portfolio use (unless restricted)

Client's Rights

  1. Work meeting specifications
  2. Timely delivery
  3. Professional quality
  4. Revisions as agreed
  5. Ownership of final deliverables (if specified)

Intellectual Property Rights

Work Made for Hire

Client owns all rights upon full payment:

  • Copyright transfers to client
  • Provider cannot reuse or resell
  • Client can modify without permission

Licensed Work

Provider retains ownership, grants usage license:

  • Provider keeps copyright
  • Client gets specific usage rights
  • Restrictions on modification/redistribution

Portfolio Rights

Provider may use work for portfolio if:

  • After project completion
  • With client attribution
  • Unless confidentiality restricts

Common Contract Types

Fixed-Price Contract

Best for: Well-defined projects

Advantages:

  • Predictable cost
  • Simple to administer
  • Provider assumes risk

Disadvantages:

  • Less flexible for changes
  • Requires detailed scope
  • Change orders needed

Time and Materials

Best for: Evolving projects

Advantages:

  • Flexible for changes
  • Good for uncertain scope
  • Pay for actual work

Disadvantages:

  • Unpredictable total cost
  • Requires detailed tracking
  • Client assumes cost risk

Retainer Agreement

Best for: Ongoing services

Structure:

  • Monthly fee
  • Set number of hours/services
  • Unused hours may roll over or expire

Acceptance and Revisions

Acceptance Process

  1. Delivery: Provider submits work
  2. Review Period: Client has X days to review
  3. Acceptance: Client approves or requests revisions
  4. Final Approval: Work is deemed complete

Revision Rights

Specify clearly:

  • Number of revision rounds included (e.g., 2 rounds)
  • Scope of revisions (minor changes vs. major rework)
  • Additional fees for extra revisions
  • Timeline for requesting revisions

Deemed Acceptance

If client doesn't respond within review period:

  • Work is automatically accepted
  • Payment becomes due
  • Revision period expires

Termination

Termination for Convenience

Either party may terminate with notice:

  • Advance notice required (e.g., 7-14 days)
  • Client pays for work completed
  • Provider delivers work in progress
  • Return of deposits/materials

Termination for Cause

Immediate termination if:

  • Material breach of contract
  • Non-payment
  • Failure to perform
  • Violation of confidentiality

Effect of Termination

Upon termination:

  • Payment for completed work
  • Return of client materials
  • Confidentiality obligations continue
  • License rights may terminate

Warranties and Limitations

Service Provider Warranties

  • Work will meet specifications
  • Provider has rights to deliver services
  • Work doesn't infringe third-party rights
  • Work is free from defects
  • Professional standards followed

Warranty Period

Typically 30-90 days:

  • Provider corrects defects
  • At no additional charge
  • Excludes client modifications
  • Excludes normal wear

Limitation of Liability

Often capped at:

  • Contract value
  • Amounts paid
  • Excludes consequential damages

Independent Contractor Status

Key Provisions

  • Not an Employee: No benefits, taxes, or insurance
  • Own Tools: Provider uses own equipment
  • Control: Provider controls methods
  • Multiple Clients: Provider can work for others
  • Taxes: Provider responsible for own taxes

Tax Implications

Service Provider:

  • Reports income
  • Pays self-employment tax
  • Receives 1099 form (U.S.) or equivalent

Client:

  • No withholding required (usually)
  • Issues 1099 if over threshold
  • No unemployment/benefits

Confidentiality

Protected Information

  • Trade secrets
  • Business strategies
  • Customer data
  • Financial information
  • Proprietary methods

Obligations

  • Keep information confidential
  • Use only for contract purpose
  • Return upon termination
  • Continues after contract ends (typically 2-5 years)

Exceptions

Not confidential if:

  • Public domain
  • Already known
  • Independently developed
  • Required by law to disclose

Change Orders

Process

  1. Client requests change
  2. Provider estimates cost and time impact
  3. Both parties agree in writing
  4. Work proceeds on revised terms

Documentation Required

  • Description of change
  • Additional cost
  • Schedule impact
  • Signature from both parties

Dispute Resolution

Negotiation

First attempt direct discussion

Mediation

Neutral third party facilitates

Arbitration

Binding decision by arbitrator

  • Faster than court
  • Less expensive
  • Limited appeal rights

Litigation

Court proceedings as last resort

Best Practices

For Service Providers

  1. Define Scope Clearly: Prevent scope creep
  2. Get Deposit: Secure commitment (20-50%)
  3. Use Milestones: Break into phases
  4. Document Everything: Email confirmations
  5. Set Boundaries: What's included/excluded
  6. Track Time: Even for fixed-price work
  7. Communicate Regularly: Progress updates
  8. Get Sign-Offs: Written approval at each stage
  9. Protect Your Work: Backup everything
  10. Use Contracts Always: Even for friends

For Clients

  1. Be Specific: Clear requirements
  2. Set Realistic Timelines: Allow adequate time
  3. Provide Complete Info: Don't withhold details
  4. Respond Promptly: Don't delay approvals
  5. Put Changes in Writing: Avoid verbal changes
  6. Pay on Time: Build good relationships
  7. Give Constructive Feedback: Be clear
  8. Respect Expertise: Trust the professional
  9. Plan for Revisions: Budget extra time
  10. Keep Records: Save all communications

Common Mistakes

Vague Scope

Problem: "Design a logo" Better: "Design 3 logo concepts, 2 revision rounds, final files in vector and PNG formats"

No Timeline

Problem: "Complete when possible" Better: "Deliver first draft by March 1, final by March 15"

Unclear Payment

Problem: "Pay when done" Better: "50% deposit, 50% upon final approval within 7 days"

Missing Ownership

Problem: Silent on who owns work Better: "All rights transfer to Client upon full payment"

No Termination Clause

Problem: Can't exit bad relationship Better: "Either party may terminate with 14 days notice"

Legal Considerations

Written Contract Required

Always use written agreement:

  • Proves terms agreed
  • Enforceable in court
  • Prevents misunderstandings
  • Professional standard

Registration

Some jurisdictions require:

  • Business license
  • Professional registration
  • Tax identification

Insurance

Consider obtaining:

  • Professional liability (E&O)
  • General liability
  • Cyber liability (for tech work)

Compliance

Follow applicable laws:

  • Tax laws
  • Labor laws
  • Industry regulations
  • Data protection (GDPR, etc.)

Conclusion

A well-drafted Service Agreement protects both parties, sets clear expectations, and provides a roadmap for successful project completion. Whether you're a freelancer, consultant, or client, taking time to create a comprehensive agreement prevents disputes and builds professional relationships.

Success in service relationships requires clear communication, realistic expectations, mutual respect, and fair dealing. A strong contract provides the foundation for achieving these goals.


Disclaimer: This article provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Service agreement laws vary by jurisdiction. Consult with qualified legal professionals for specific situations.