Independent Contractor Agreement
A template for hiring independent contractors and freelancers.
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What this document is for
An Independent Contractor Agreement is a written contract between a client and a self-employed person or business that is being hired to provide services. It sets out the terms of the working relationship, including the scope of work, fees, payment terms, deadlines, confidentiality obligations, ownership of work product, termination rights, and the fact that the contractor is not an employee.
This document is commonly used when a business hires a freelancer, consultant, subcontractor, specialist, or service provider for a project or ongoing services. It helps both parties understand what work will be done, what will be paid, when the work must be completed, and which responsibilities each side has during the engagement.
A well-drafted Independent Contractor Agreement is important because it reduces misunderstandings about deliverables, invoicing, expenses, revisions, intellectual property, and the legal status of the relationship. It also helps show that the contractor is operating independently rather than as an employee, which can matter for tax, labour, and compliance purposes.
When to use it
Use an Independent Contractor Agreement when a person or business is being engaged to perform services as an independent service provider rather than as an employee.
This document is useful when:
- a company hires a freelancer for design, writing, development, marketing, or consulting work
- a business engages a self-employed contractor for a project with defined deliverables
- a client wants written payment terms for contracted services
- a consultant is being retained for strategic, technical, or operational advice
- a subcontractor is being brought in to perform part of a larger project
- the parties want to clarify deadlines, revisions, and ownership of completed work
- a service provider needs written protection before starting work
- the client wants confidentiality and non-disclosure obligations in place
- the work will be done remotely or on a flexible schedule outside normal employment terms
- both parties want a clear written record of the scope of services and fees
An Independent Contractor Agreement is especially useful when the work is specialized, project-based, time-limited, or performed by someone who works with multiple clients.
When not to use it
An Independent Contractor Agreement is not the right document for every working relationship. Some arrangements require a different contract.
You may need a different document if:
- the worker is actually being hired as an employee
- the relationship involves fixed hours, direct supervision, and ongoing employment obligations
- the business needs an Employment Contract rather than a contractor agreement
- the arrangement is for a volunteer or unpaid role
- the parties are forming a partnership or joint venture
- the transaction is mainly for the sale of goods rather than services
- the client only needs a short quotation or proposal before deciding whether to hire the contractor
- the work requires a more detailed statement of work or master services agreement
- the engagement is through a staffing agency or labour broker
- local law treats the worker as an employee despite the label used in the contract
Using a contractor agreement for someone who is really an employee can create serious legal, tax, and labour issues. The real relationship matters more than the title of the document.
Key clauses explained
An Independent Contractor Agreement should clearly define the service relationship. The following clauses are often the most important.
Parties
This section identifies the client and the contractor. Use the full legal names of the individuals or businesses involved.
Services
The services clause explains what work the contractor will perform. This should be specific enough to avoid confusion about the scope of the engagement.
Deliverables
Where relevant, the agreement should state what the contractor must deliver, such as reports, designs, code, content, plans, analysis, or completed tasks.
Term and timeline
This clause states when the agreement begins, how long it lasts, and whether the work has deadlines, milestones, or completion dates.
Fees and payment terms
This section explains how much the contractor will be paid, whether the fee is hourly, daily, milestone-based, or fixed, and when payment is due.
Expenses
An expenses clause states whether the contractor can recover approved out-of-pocket costs such as travel, materials, hosting, or software subscriptions.
Independent contractor status
This is one of the most important parts of the agreement. It states that the contractor is self-employed, responsible for their own taxes and business obligations, and not entitled to employee benefits unless the law says otherwise.
Confidentiality
This clause protects confidential business information, trade secrets, client data, internal systems, pricing, and other non-public information shared during the engagement.
Intellectual property
Where the contractor creates work product, the agreement may address whether the client owns the final deliverables, whether rights transfer on payment, and what rights the contractor keeps in background materials or tools.
Non-solicitation or restrictive covenants
Some agreements include limited restrictions on poaching clients, staff, or confidential opportunities. These should be tailored carefully because enforceability varies.
Warranties and standard of work
This clause may require the contractor to perform the services with reasonable skill, care, and professionalism.
Liability and indemnity
Some agreements address responsibility for losses, third-party claims, or breaches of confidentiality, though these clauses should be reviewed carefully.
Termination
The contract should explain how either party may end the relationship, what notice is required, and what happens to unfinished work, payments, and confidential information after termination.
Governing law
This clause identifies which jurisdiction’s law applies. This matters because contractor classification and contract rules differ widely by location.
Jurisdiction notes
Independent contractor relationships are regulated differently across countries, states, and provinces. In many places, simply calling someone an independent contractor does not make them one. Authorities may look at the real working relationship, including control, exclusivity, hours, supervision, equipment, financial risk, and dependency.
Before using this Independent Contractor Agreement, check local law on:
- contractor vs employee classification
- tax withholding and registration obligations
- mandatory contract terms
- invoicing and VAT or sales tax rules
- worker protection laws
- intellectual property ownership rules
- confidentiality and restrictive covenants
- professional licensing requirements
- health and safety obligations
- data protection rules
- termination rights and notice requirements
If the contractor works mainly for one client, uses the client’s systems full time, follows fixed working hours, or is managed like staff, there may be a risk that the relationship could be treated as employment regardless of the contract wording. The document should match the real arrangement.
How to fill this out correctly
To complete an Independent Contractor Agreement properly, gather the key business and project details before drafting.
-
Enter the full legal names of the client and contractor.
Use the correct business name if either party is a company or registered entity. -
Describe the services clearly.
State exactly what the contractor is being hired to do. -
Add deliverables and timelines.
Include deadlines, milestones, review periods, or completion dates if relevant. -
Set the payment structure.
State whether the contractor is paid hourly, per milestone, per project, or on another basis. -
Add invoicing and payment terms.
Record when invoices may be sent and how quickly the client must pay them. -
State what happens with expenses.
Make clear whether the contractor may recover approved costs and how those must be documented. -
Include confidentiality and data handling terms.
This is especially important where the contractor will access client records, customer information, or internal systems. -
Address ownership of work product.
State whether the client receives ownership of the completed deliverables and when that happens. -
Confirm the contractor’s independent status.
The agreement should reflect that the contractor controls how the work is performed, subject to the agreed result. -
Review termination and notice provisions.
Make sure both parties understand how the agreement can be ended. -
Check local compliance issues.
Ensure the agreement does not conflict with worker classification rules or mandatory legal requirements. -
Have both parties sign and date the contract.
Each party should keep a full copy of the signed agreement.
A strong contractor agreement is specific, commercially clear, and aligned with the actual working relationship.
Common mistakes
Independent contractor agreements often create problems when they are copied without adapting them to the actual engagement. Common mistakes include:
- describing the contractor relationship in a way that looks like employment
- failing to define the services clearly
- leaving deliverables vague
- not stating payment terms or invoice deadlines
- ignoring who owns the finished work
- forgetting confidentiality protections
- allowing expense claims without clear approval rules
- using the wrong legal entity names
- failing to address late payments or project delays
- using employment-style policies in a contractor agreement
- including broad restrictive clauses that may be unenforceable
- not checking local worker classification rules
- leaving out termination rights
- not keeping a signed copy of the agreement
A contractor agreement should reduce risk and uncertainty, not create a dispute about what was actually agreed.
Before you sign checklist
Before signing this Independent Contractor Agreement, review the following:
- Confirm the client’s full legal name
- Confirm the contractor’s full legal name
- Check the service description
- Review the deliverables and deadlines
- Confirm the fee structure
- Check invoicing and payment terms
- Review any approved expense rules
- Confirm the independent contractor status wording
- Check confidentiality obligations
- Review intellectual property ownership terms
- Confirm data handling or privacy obligations if relevant
- Check termination and notice provisions
- Make sure the contract matches the real working arrangement
- Ensure it complies with local contractor classification rules
- Sign and date all required pages
- Give each party a copy of the signed agreement
Completed sample
Below is an example of how an Independent Contractor Agreement might look once completed. This sample is for illustration only.
Client:
NorthPeak Digital (Pty) Ltd
Contractor:
Lebo Mthembu trading as Mthembu Creative Studio
Services:
Website copywriting, landing page messaging, and monthly email campaign content for the client’s marketing team
Start Date:
1 April 2026
End Date:
30 June 2026, unless terminated earlier in accordance with the agreement
Deliverables:
- homepage copy rewrite
- 5 landing pages
- 3 email campaign sequences per month
- monthly content performance summary
Fee Structure:
R18,000 per month, invoiced monthly in arrears
Payment Terms:
Invoices payable within 7 days of receipt by electronic funds transfer
Expenses:
No reimbursable expenses without the client’s prior written approval
Confidentiality:
The contractor must keep confidential all campaign data, customer information, pricing details, and internal business information shared during the engagement.
Intellectual Property:
All final approved written deliverables created specifically for the client under this agreement will belong to the client once full payment has been received.
Independent Status:
The contractor is engaged as an independent contractor and is responsible for all taxes, registrations, and business obligations associated with the services.
Termination:
Either party may terminate the agreement on 14 days’ written notice, subject to payment for services properly performed up to the termination date.
Signatures:
Client: ____________________
Contractor: ____________________
Date: ____________________
FAQ
What is an independent contractor agreement?
An independent contractor agreement is a contract used when a client hires a self-employed person or business to provide services without creating an employment relationship.
Is an independent contractor the same as an employee?
No. An independent contractor is usually self-employed and runs their own business, while an employee works under the employer’s direction and is usually entitled to employment protections and benefits under local law.
Can I use this agreement for freelance work?
Yes. This template can often be used for freelance, consulting, and project-based services, provided it is adapted to the actual work and legal requirements.
Why does contractor classification matter?
It matters because calling someone a contractor does not automatically make them one. If the real relationship looks like employment, there can be legal, tax, and labour consequences.
Should intellectual property be included?
In many service arrangements, yes. If the contractor is creating content, code, designs, reports, or other deliverables, the agreement should clearly say who owns them.
Can a contractor work for multiple clients?
Usually yes. That is often one of the features associated with genuine independent contractor status, although the real facts and local law still matter.
Do I need confidentiality terms?
In most business engagements, yes. Confidentiality clauses help protect non-public business information, customer data, pricing, systems, and strategies.
Should I get legal advice before using this agreement?
That can be a good idea, especially for long-term engagements, high-value projects, cross-border work, intellectual property-heavy work, or situations where contractor classification may be disputed.
Related resources
You may also find these documents and guides useful:
- 1.The contractor is an independent contractor and not an employee of the client.
- 2.The contractor is responsible for their own taxes and insurance.
- 3.The contractor retains ownership of any work product unless otherwise specified.