Client ManagementFebruary 22, 2026·9 min read

The Freelance Contract Template Every Freelancer Needs in 2026

A freelance contract is not a sign of distrust. It is a sign of professionalism, and clients who have worked with experienced freelancers before expect one. Yet a surprising number of freelancers still start projects on a handshake — and pay the price when a project goes sideways.

The Non-Negotiable Clauses

Scope of work. Describe exactly what you will deliver in specific terms. Anything not listed is out of scope. Reference a separate project brief document if the scope is complex.

Payment terms. Specify the total amount, the payment schedule (50% deposit upfront, 50% on delivery is standard), the payment method, and the late payment consequence. A late payment clause — typically 1.5% per month on overdue amounts — is standard commercial practice.

Revision policy. Define how many rounds of revisions are included. "Two rounds of revisions" is clear. "Revisions until you are happy" is an open-ended commitment that will cost you.

Intellectual property transfer. IP transfers upon receipt of final payment in full. This clause gives you leverage if a client tries to use your work without paying.

Termination clause. If the client terminates, they pay for all work completed to date plus a kill fee of 25% of the remaining project value.

The Clauses Most Freelancers Forget

Feedback timeline. The client must provide feedback within a set number of business days (five is standard). If they do not, the project timeline extends accordingly.

Portfolio rights. Reserve the right to display the work in your portfolio unless the client explicitly requests confidentiality.

We have a free freelance contract template that includes all the clauses above — it is part of the free resource pack at Freelancer Vault.

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