Protect your web design projects with these 10 essential contract clauses. Includes legal examples, risk alerts, and a free editable contract template.
Why Web Design Contracts Matter
A handshake won't protect your timeline, your scope or your money.
Whether you’re a solo freelancer or a growing web agency, a rock-solid contract is your first defense against:
Scope creep
Non-payment
Intellectual property theft
Missed deadlines
Misaligned expectations
This guide walks you through the 10 critical clauses every contract needs — with real examples, risk alerts, and editable templates included.
Project Overview & Purpose
What it is: A quick summary of what you're building and why.
Why it matters: Aligns both parties from day one.
📄 Example:
“This agreement covers the design and development of a 6-page responsive marketing website for [Client], focusing on lead generation.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Misalignment about project size or purpose.
Scope of Work
What it is: The details, pages, features, platforms, content handling, hosting, etc.
Why it matters: Prevents scope creep and finger-pointing.
📄 Example Snippet:
“The Designer will deliver a fully responsive website including: Home, About, Services, Blog, Contact, and Privacy pages. CMS will be WordPress. Content provided by Client.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Client expects infinite revisions and added features.
Timeline & Deadlines
What it is: Project phases and delivery dates.
Why it matters: Keeps expectations clear.
📄 Example:
“Project will begin May 1, 2025. Initial homepage design due by May 8, 2025. Final site delivery by June 5, 2025.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Vague timelines = late delivery, payment delays.
Payment Terms
What it is: Deposit %, milestones, late fees, and payment methods.
Why it matters: Protects your income.
📄 Example:
“50% due at project start, 50% upon delivery. Payment due within 7 days of invoice. 5% late fee after 10 days.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Unpaid balances, awkward collection conversations.
Revisions & Feedback
What it is: Number of rounds, timing, and what counts as a revision.
Why it matters: Prevents endless edits.
📄 Example:
“Client is entitled to 2 rounds of revisions per page. Revisions must be submitted within 3 business days.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Rework burnout, deliverables stuck in revision limbo.
Client Responsibilities
What it is: What the client must do (provide content, feedback, approvals).
Why it matters: Holds both sides accountable.
📄 Example:
“Client must provide all written content and logo files by May 3, 2025. Delays in content delivery may impact the project timeline.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: You get blamed for delays they caused.
Intellectual Property Rights
What it is: Who owns what, code, images, designs.
Why it matters: Prevents legal disputes.
📄 Example:
“Final deliverables are the intellectual property of the Client once full payment is received. Designer retains right to showcase for portfolio.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Client assumes ownership before payment; reuse disputes.
Confidentiality & NDA
What it is: A simple non-disclosure clause.
Why it matters: Protects sensitive project info.
📄 Example:
“Both parties agree not to disclose proprietary or confidential information to third parties without written consent.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Client may feel unsafe or breach your privacy.
Termination & Cancellation
What it is: How either party can exit the agreement.
Why it matters: Avoids ghosting or project stalling.
📄 Example:
“Either party may terminate the agreement with 7-day notice. If terminated early, the Client shall pay for all work completed to date.”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Client vanishes mid-project with no recourse.
Legal, Liability & Force Majeure
What it is: Covers your legal protection.
Why it matters: Sets legal jurisdiction, protects against disasters.
📄 Example:
“This agreement shall be governed by the laws of [Your State]. Neither party shall be liable for delay caused by events beyond control (e.g., pandemic, blackout, war).”
⚠️ Risk if missing: Legal ambiguity, no escape from act-of-God events.
FAQ (PAA Schema Block)
Q: What is the most important clause in a web design contract?
A: The Scope of Work. It defines deliverables and prevents scope creep.
Q: Should I include late payment fees?
A: Yes. It incentivizes timely payment and gives leverage if overdue.
Q: Can I reuse a template for all clients?
A: You can start with a base, but customize it per project type, size, and client.
Q: What if the client terminates halfway?
A: Include a cancellation clause so you're compensated for work completed.