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Save time with free contract templates

Download any template, fill in your details, then send for e-signature in minutes.

2 templates

What's a contract template?

A contract template is a pre-written, legally structured document that covers the standard clauses needed for a particular type of agreement — such as a freelance engagement, a payment plan, or a non-disclosure obligation. Rather than drafting a contract from scratch, you download the template, fill in the specific details for your situation (names, amounts, dates, scope), and it's ready to sign.

Good templates are built around the clauses that matter most in real-world disputes: clear identification of the parties, precise obligations, payment terms, confidentiality, intellectual property, termination rights, and governing law. Because the structure is already in place, both parties know exactly what they're agreeing to — and either party can rely on the document if things go wrong.

Our templates are available in PDF and DOCX format. The PDF is ideal for signing as-is; the DOCX lets you edit the text before you sign. Once you've filled in your details, you can upload the document to QuickerSign and send it for e-signature in minutes.

Why you should be using contract templates

Most contract disputes don't happen because someone acted in bad faith — they happen because expectations were never written down. Templates fix that before work even starts.

Stop starting from scratch

Writing a contract from nothing takes hours and still risks missing critical clauses. A template gives you a solid, battle-tested foundation in minutes.

Get paid on time

Payment terms, due dates, and late-fee clauses written into a signed contract give you legal recourse — and a much stronger position — when a client is slow to pay.

Protect your intellectual property

Without a signed agreement, ownership of work you create can be disputed. A contract makes clear who owns what, and when rights transfer.

Define scope and avoid scope creep

Vague verbal agreements invite endless extra requests. A written scope of work gives you a clear line to point to when a client asks for "just one more thing."

Look more professional

Sending a well-structured contract signals that you take your work seriously. Clients are more likely to respect deadlines, budgets, and boundaries when everything is formalised.

Enforce your rights if things go wrong

A signed contract is admissible evidence. Whether it's a late payment, a breach of confidentiality, or a disputed deliverable, your contract gives you a foundation to act.

Frequently asked questions