Video & Audio Contract Template

Free DJ Contract Template

Set clear terms before production begins. Cover deliverables, IP, revisions, and payment milestones in one document.

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What is a DJ contract?

A dj contract is a written agreement that defines the scope of a production project, the deliverables, payment schedule, intellectual property ownership, and how either party can exit if needed. Production contracts are important because projects often span weeks or months, involve significant upfront costs, and carry complex IP considerations. This template is a starting point only and is not legal advice.

What to include in a DJ contract

Common dj contract line items

Service Typical Rate Unit
DJ Performance Fee (3-4 hours) £200 - £1,000 per event
Club Night / Festival Set £200 - £5,000+ per set
Wedding DJ Package (4-6 hours) £400 - £1,200 per event
Corporate Event DJ £400 - £1,500 per event
PA System Hire (for small-medium venues) £150 - £500 per event
Travel / Accommodation At cost / 45p per mile per event

How to write a dj contract

Send a dj contract before any pre-production work begins. Define the deliverables specifically: video length, format, number of revisions, and delivery method. Set a milestone payment schedule tied to production stages (script approval, rough cut, final delivery). State clearly who owns the raw footage: many producers retain raw files and transfer only the final cut. Address music licensing explicitly: who pays for it and who is liable if it is not properly licensed. Sign before the shoot. This template is not legal advice: review with a solicitor for any significant project.

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This dj 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

How many revision rounds should I include in a dj contract?
Most djs 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 djs 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 dj'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 dj'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.
Do I really need a written contract, or is email enough?
Email exchanges can form a binding agreement in many jurisdictions, but they are far harder to rely on when a dispute arises. A written contract in a single document sets out the full scope, payment, IP ownership, and termination terms in one place. If anything is disputed, you point to one signed document rather than hunting through a thread. For any project above a few hundred pounds or dollars, a proper written contract is worth the time. This template provides a starting point, but it is not legal advice: have a solicitor review it before use for anything material.
What should the deposit be for a dj contract?
A common pattern is a deposit of 25 to 50 percent of the total project fee, paid before work begins. The deposit protects you against a client who disappears after you have invested time, and it signals that the client is serious. Some djs use a tiered structure: a deposit at signing, a milestone payment at 50 percent completion, and a final payment on delivery. For very large projects, three or four milestone payments spread the financial risk for both sides. Whatever you agree, write it clearly in the contract.
What happens if the client wants to change the scope mid-project?
Scope creep is one of the most common sources of disputes in dj work. Your contract should include a change-order clause that states any additions to the agreed scope must be documented in writing, priced separately, and approved by both parties before the additional work begins. Without this clause, clients may expect extra work at no cost. A short change-order form or email confirmation referencing the contract is sufficient. Good contracts make scope changes a process, not a battle.