Creative Contract Template

Free Brand Designer Contract Template

Set clear terms before brand designer work begins. Cover scope, payment, intellectual property, and revisions in one document.

Create Free Contract View Pricing

What is a Brand Designer contract?

A brand designer contract is a written agreement that defines what creative work will be produced, who owns it, and how and when the brand designer will be paid. Without a contract, creative projects are vulnerable to scope creep, late payment, and disputes over intellectual property. This template covers the essential clauses for brand designer engagements. It is a starting point only and is not legal advice: have a solicitor review it before use.

What to include in a Brand Designer contract

Common brand designer contract line items

Service Typical Rate Unit
Brand Discovery & Strategy Workshop £600 - £1,800 per project
Visual Identity System £2,000 - £8,000 per project
Brand Guidelines Document £500 - £1,500 per document
Stationery & Template Design £400 - £1,200 per set
Brand Audit & Research £80 - £150 per hour
Social Media Template Pack £400 - £900 per pack

How to write a brand designer contract

Before sending a brand designer contract, agree the scope verbally first so the document reflects a shared understanding. Define deliverables precisely: list every file format, resolution, and component that will be supplied. Set a revision policy that limits included changes to a specific number of consolidated rounds, with additional rounds billed separately. Agree IP transfer terms up front: most brand designers retain copyright until final payment is received and delivered. Sign before work begins. For anything above a small project, have a solicitor review the contract first. This template is not legal advice.

Send your brand designer contract in minutes

Start free. No credit card required.

Get started free

This brand designer contract template is provided for informational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Tidybill does not guarantee that this template is suitable for any particular situation or enforceable in any particular jurisdiction. Before signing or relying on any contract, consult a qualified solicitor or attorney in your jurisdiction. Laws differ between countries and regions.

Frequently asked questions

Is an electronic signature legally binding?
In most jurisdictions, yes. The UK Electronic Communications Act 2000, the US ESIGN Act, the EU eIDAS Regulation, and equivalent legislation in many other countries recognise electronic signatures as legally binding for most commercial contracts. Tools such as DocuSign, Adobe Sign, or even a typed name in an email confirming agreement are generally sufficient. However, some document types (such as deeds, wills, or land transfers) require wet signatures. For a standard brand designer services contract, an e-signature is almost always acceptable. Confirm with a solicitor if you are unsure for your jurisdiction.
What if the client disputes the work?
Your contract should include a dispute resolution clause. A typical approach is: first, the parties attempt to resolve the dispute informally within a specified period (say, 14 days); if that fails, the matter goes to mediation before any legal action. Some contracts specify which courts have jurisdiction and which country's law governs. These clauses do not prevent disputes, but they make resolution cheaper and faster. Keep records of all communications, approved revisions, and milestone sign-offs throughout the project: these are your evidence if a dispute escalates.
Is this template valid in the UK, US, or South Africa?
This template is provided for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Contract law differs between countries and even between states or provinces within a country. What is standard or enforceable in one jurisdiction may not be in another. Before relying on this template for any real project, have a qualified solicitor or attorney in your jurisdiction review and adapt it. Tidybill does not guarantee that this template is suitable for any particular situation or enforceable in any particular jurisdiction.
How many revision rounds should I include in a brand designer contract?
Most brand designers include two to three rounds of revisions in the base fee. A revision round is typically defined as one consolidated set of feedback, not a series of individual requests sent piecemeal. Define "revision" specifically in your contract: what counts as a revision, what counts as a new deliverable, and what you charge for additional rounds. Being specific here prevents misunderstandings and protects your time. Some brand designers charge a flat fee per additional round; others bill at their hourly rate.
Should the contract specify a governing law?
Yes. A governing law clause states which country's or state's law applies to the contract and which courts have jurisdiction if there is a dispute. For most freelance and small business contracts, this is the brand designer's home jurisdiction. Clients in other countries may push back, but it is generally in your interest to use your own jurisdiction. Without a governing law clause, both parties may disagree about which rules apply, making any dispute significantly more complicated and expensive to resolve.
What is a liability cap and should I include one?
A liability cap limits the total amount either party can claim from the other in the event of a dispute or loss. For example, a contract might cap the brand designer's liability to the total fees paid under that contract. Liability caps protect freelancers and small businesses from disproportionate claims. They are standard in professional service contracts. However, the specific wording matters greatly: overly broad or poorly worded caps may be unenforceable. This template is a starting point only and is not a substitute for qualified legal advice.