Contract Generator
Generate a polished contract tailored to your situation—choose the agreement type, add the key details, and get a structured draft with standard clauses you can review and edit.
Generated Contract Draft
Your contract draft will appear here (structured clauses, ready to review and edit)...
How the AI Contract Generator Works
Get results in seconds with a simple workflow.
Choose a Contract Type
Select the agreement you need—service agreement, freelance contract, consulting agreement, NDA, and more—to guide the clause structure and sections.
Add Key Deal Details
Enter the parties and the scope of work. Optionally add payment terms and governing law to tailor the draft to your project and location.
Generate & Review
Click Generate Contract to receive a structured draft you can copy, edit, and share. Review carefully and customize any clauses for your exact needs.
See It in Action
See how the contract generator turns a rough deal summary into a structured, professional agreement draft.
I’m hiring a freelancer to write 8 blog posts for my SaaS. They’ll do SEO keywords. I’ll pay $1,200 total, half now and half when done. I want to own the content. Due in 3 weeks.
This Service Agreement is entered into between Client and Provider. Provider will deliver eight (8) SEO-optimized blog posts (1,200–1,800 words each) for Client’s SaaS, including keyword integration provided by Client and one (1) revision per post. Total fee is $1,200 USD, with 50% due upon signing and 50% due upon final delivery (Net 7). All intellectual property rights in the final, paid-for deliverables will transfer to Client upon receipt of full payment. Term is three (3) weeks from the Effective Date, with milestones and delivery dates set forth in the Scope of Work section.
Why Use Our AI Contract Generator?
Powered by the latest AI to deliver fast, accurate results.
Multiple Contract Types
Generate a service agreement, freelance contract, consulting agreement, NDA (one-way or mutual), and more—ideal for small businesses, creators, and agencies.
Professional Clause Structure
Outputs a well-organized contract draft with definitions, scope, payment, term, termination, confidentiality, IP, liability, dispute resolution, and signature blocks (as applicable).
Fast Customization for Real-World Deals
Add your parties, scope of work, and payment terms, then get a tailored agreement you can copy, share, and refine—great for client onboarding and project kickoff.
Plain-English Option
Prefer simpler wording? Generate contracts in clear, readable language without losing professional clarity—helpful for freelancers and first-time clients.
Works for Remote & Digital Services
Especially useful for common online work—web design, SEO services, content writing, marketing retainers, consulting, and productized services.
Pro Tips for Better Results
Get the most out of the AI Contract Generator with these expert tips.
Be specific about deliverables and acceptance
For services, list deliverables, deadlines, and acceptance criteria (what “done” means). This reduces disputes and sets clearer expectations.
Include revision and change-request rules
If you’re doing creative or content work, define how many revisions are included and how extra work is billed—this protects both sides.
Clarify IP ownership and usage rights
Specify when ownership transfers (often after full payment) and whether either party can showcase the work in portfolios or case studies.
Align payment terms with risk
Use deposits, milestone payments, or retainers for longer projects. Add late-fee language and net terms to improve cash flow predictability.
Don’t skip governing law and dispute resolution
Adding governing law, venue, and a dispute process (negotiation/mediation/arbitration) can prevent costly misunderstandings later.
Who Is This For?
Trusted by millions of students, writers, and professionals worldwide.
How to use this AI Contract Generator (without overcomplicating it)
Most contracts fail in boring ways. Not because someone tried to be shady, but because the agreement is vague.
Things like:
- What exactly is being delivered?
- When is it due?
- What counts as accepted work?
- Who owns the files and when does ownership transfer?
- What happens if someone cancels halfway through?
This Contract Generator helps you get a solid first draft on the page fast, with the sections people expect to see in a real agreement. Then you tweak it to match your deal.
If you want a quick overview of what to do, it’s basically this:
- Pick the closest contract type (service, freelance, consulting, NDA, etc.).
- Paste the parties exactly as you want them named.
- Write the scope like you are explaining it to a smart stranger.
- Add payment terms, even if they are simple.
- Choose governing law if you already know it.
- Generate, then read it like you are trying to find holes.
What this tool generates (and what it intentionally does not)
A good contract draft usually includes a familiar backbone. Depending on the contract type you choose, you will typically see sections like:
- Parties and effective date
- Definitions (especially in NDAs and detailed modes)
- Scope of work and deliverables
- Timeline, milestones, and client responsibilities
- Fees, invoicing, deposits, late payment language
- Intellectual property and ownership transfer
- Confidentiality (for NDAs and service agreements too, if relevant)
- Term and termination
- Warranties and disclaimers
- Limitation of liability
- Dispute resolution and governing law
- Boilerplate (entire agreement, amendments, severability)
- Signature blocks
What it does not do is magically know your local laws, industry regulations, or edge cases. It’s a drafting tool. You still need to review it carefully, and if the deal is high stakes, have a qualified attorney look it over.
Getting better results from your inputs (this part matters)
If you paste one sentence into Scope of Work, you will get a contract that feels generic. That’s normal.
Try using this mini checklist inside the scope box:
Scope of work checklist
- Deliverables (what you are handing over, in a countable way)
- Quality notes (format, length, standards, tools, platforms)
- Timeline (start date, milestones, final deadline)
- Revisions (how many, and what counts as a revision)
- Client inputs (what the client must provide, and by when)
- Acceptance criteria (how approval works, and what happens if they go silent)
And for payment terms, include the basics even if it feels repetitive:
- Total price (or hourly rate)
- Deposit or retainer (if any)
- Invoice schedule (upfront, milestone, weekly, net terms)
- Late fee language (simple is fine)
Which mode should you choose?
Different deals need different levels of detail, and honestly different clients have different tolerance for legalese.
- Standard: best default. Reads like a normal business agreement.
- Plain English: great if your client is non legal and you want fewer misunderstandings.
- Detailed: useful when risk is higher, the project is long, or IP and confidentiality are sensitive.
- Short & Simple: fine for straightforward work when both sides already trust each other, but still want something in writing.
Common contract mistakes this tool helps you avoid
A few classic problems show up again and again in freelancer and small business contracts:
1) Vague deliverables
“Design a website” can mean a landing page or a full custom build with animations, copywriting, and SEO. Spell it out.
2) Missing termination terms
If someone cancels, what gets paid, what gets delivered, and what happens to partially completed work?
3) No clarity on IP ownership
Clients often assume they own everything immediately. Providers often assume they retain rights until full payment. The contract should say it plainly.
4) Payment terms that don’t protect cash flow
Net 30 with no deposit is basically you financing the project. A simple deposit plus milestone payments changes everything.
5) NDAs that are too broad or unrealistic
A workable NDA defines confidential information, permitted disclosures, and the duration. If it tries to cover literally everything forever, it can create friction.
A quick note on NDAs (mutual vs one way)
If you are deciding between the two:
- One-way NDA: one party is disclosing sensitive info and the other party agrees to protect it. Common when a company is hiring a contractor.
- Mutual NDA: both sides may share confidential info and both agree to protect it. Common in partnerships, early product talks, or agency vendor relationships.
Pick the one that matches the actual flow of information. That’s the simplest rule.
Not legal advice, but still a practical workflow
A contract draft is step one. The smart move is to treat it like a checklist, then finalize it.
A simple workflow that works:
- Generate the draft.
- Read it out loud and fix awkward or unclear parts.
- Add your deal specifics where the template language is too broad.
- Remove sections you truly do not need (but be careful).
- Save a versioned copy before sending.
- Get legal review if the project is large, regulated, or high risk.
If you are building a full client onboarding flow, you might also find other tools on WritingTools.ai helpful for the emails, proposals, and project docs that usually go along with the agreement.
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