Free Subcontractor Agreement Template for Videographers
A Subcontractor Agreement is used when the primary contractor on a project brings in another contractor to handle specific work — common in trades, construction, and agency work. This version is tailored for videographers — covering the specific clauses and considerations that matter most in the industry.
Subcontractor Agreement — Template Preview
For VideographersSubcontractor Agreement
For use in Videographers
1. Engagement
[COMPANY] engages [CONTRACTOR] as an independent contractor to provide services in videographers. Contractor is not an employee, partner, agent or joint venturer of Company.
2. Scope of Work
Contractor will provide the services described in Exhibit A. Contractor controls the method, manner and means of performing the services, and may engage assistants at Contractor's expense.
3. Compensation
Company will pay Contractor $[RATE] per [hour / project / milestone] within fifteen (15) days of receiving an invoice. Contractor is responsible for all taxes, including self-employment tax.
4. No Benefits
Contractor is not entitled to any employee benefits, including health insurance, retirement contributions, paid time off, or workers' compensation coverage.
5. Equipment & Expenses
Contractor will provide its own equipment, tools and workspace. Contractor is responsible for ordinary business expenses unless approved in advance by Company.
6. Confidentiality & IP
Contractor will keep Company information confidential. Work product specifically created for Company under this Agreement is owned by Company upon payment; pre-existing IP remains Contractor's.
7. Termination
Either party may terminate with [NUMBER] days written notice. Sections on Confidentiality, IP and Indemnification survive termination.
8. Independent Contractor Status
The parties intend that Contractor is an independent contractor under all applicable laws, including the IRS 20-factor test and applicable state ABC tests. Contractor agrees to defend this classification if challenged.
Industry-specific considerations for videographers
Beyond the standard subcontractor agreement clauses, here are the specific items videographers typically need to address before signing:
- Music licensing responsibility
- Raw footage ownership
- Drone permits and FAA Part 107
- Editing turnaround (4–8 weeks typical)
Typical pricing in videographers
Shoot day $1,500 + editing $100/hr.
How to use this template — 3 steps
Customize
Use our eSign tool to drop in your real names, dates, scope and fees. The template handles the legal scaffolding; you fill in the specifics for your videographers engagement.
Add signature fields
Drag-drop signature, date, initials, and text fields onto the document. Assign each field to the correct signer (yourself, the client, or both).
Send for signature
Enter the other party's name and email, hit Send. They receive a signing link via email — no account required. You get notified the second they sign.
Customization tips before you send
- • Replace every [BRACKETED] placeholder with real values — names, dates, dollar amounts, percentages.
- • Set the governing law to your state — usually where you live or do business.
- • Confirm the project-based term length matches your project.
- • If this is a high-stakes contract (over ~$50K, or anything involving significant ongoing liability), have a licensed attorney in your state spend 30 minutes on a review.
FAQ — Subcontractor Agreement for Videographers
Do videographers really need a Subcontractor Agreement?+
Yes — and especially in videographers, where intellectual property gets created on every job. A signed subcontractor agreement protects both sides if something goes wrong — and most disputes can be solved by simply pointing at the signed contract.
What's different about a Subcontractor Agreement for videographers?+
Compared to a generic subcontractor agreement, the videographers version typically adds clauses around: Music licensing responsibility; Raw footage ownership; Drone permits and FAA Part 107.
Is this Subcontractor Agreement legally binding once signed?+
Yes. Under the federal ESIGN Act and state UETA laws, an electronic signature is just as legally binding as a wet-ink signature for almost all commercial contracts. Our eSign tool produces a SHA-256 audit trail proving who signed, when, and from where — so the contract is defensible in court.
Can I edit this template?+
Yes — and you should. The template covers the typical scope, but every videographers engagement has unique details (rates, scope, deadlines). Use our eSign tool to drop in your actual project details before sending the contract for signature.
How do I sign this online?+
Click "Edit & sign online — free" below. Our eSign tool opens with a blank document; upload your customized contract PDF, drag-drop signature/date fields, and email it to the other party. They sign from any device — no account needed for signers.
Other contracts videographers commonly need
Ready to sign?
Open the Subcontractor Agreement in our free eSign tool, customize it for your videographers engagement, and send it for signature in under 2 minutes.
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