Under the U.S. Copyright Act, "work for hire" means the person or company that paid for the work owns it from the moment of creation. But there's a catch — this rule only applies in two narrow situations.
First, if the creator is your actual employee. Second, if the work was specially commissioned, falls into specific categories (like translations, compilations, or instructional texts), and there's a written agreement saying it's work for hire.
Work for Hire Applies ONLY If:
✓ The creator is your W-2 employee, OR
✓ The work fits one of nine specific commissioned categories AND you have a signed written agreement
Most independent contractors don't qualify. A freelance designer isn't your employee. A developer building your app probably doesn't fall into those nine categories (and even if they did, you'd still need that written agreement).
Example: A freelance designer automatically owns the logo, website mockups, and brand guidelines she creates for you — unless your contract explicitly transfers those rights.
Here's the default rule: the creator owns the intellectual property. You get what's called an "implied license" to use the work for the purpose you hired them for. That's it.
This gets messy fast. Your contractor can reuse components of your custom software in other clients' projects. They can resell that template they built for you. If you stop paying them or if there's a dispute, they can revoke your license and you lose access to work you paid for.
We've seen a California startup spend $10,000 in legal fees after losing rights to their logo because their independent contractor agreement didn't include IP transfer language. The designer kept the copyright, and when the relationship soured, the company had to redesign everything or negotiate a buyout.
This clause looks harmless. It isn't. We explained why payment doesn't equal ownership here — now let's fix it inside your contractor agreement.
The fix is straightforward: you need an IP Assignment Clause. This is the legal mechanism that transfers ownership from the contractor to your business.
Let's break that down. "Assigns" means transfers ownership completely — not licenses, not shares, transfers. "All right, title, and interest" covers every type of legal claim to the work: copyright, patents, trademarks, trade secrets, everything.
"Work product" needs to be defined clearly in your agreement (designs, code, documentation, whatever you're paying for). Without this clause, you're just renting access to someone else's intellectual property.
The difference between assignment and license matters. An assignment gives you full ownership. A license just gives you permission to use something the contractor still owns. For most businesses, you want assignment. Learn more about IP assignment clauses here.
The biggest mistake? Not including an IP clause at all. We see this constantly — businesses download a generic contractor template, skim it, and never notice the IP section is missing or vague.
Second most common: using boilerplate language that doesn't actually transfer copyright. A clause that says the contractor "grants a license" isn't the same as "assigns all rights." One lets you use the work. The other makes you the owner.
Other critical errors: failing to define what "work product" includes (does it cover drafts? source files? documentation?), assuming an NDA covers ownership (it doesn't — NDAs are about confidentiality, not copyright), and not getting the agreement signed before the contractor starts working.
Pro Tip
⚠️ Payment ≠ Ownership. Always include an assignment clause before any deliverables are created. If the contractor has already started work, get them to sign an agreement with retroactive assignment language immediately.
Use SMVRT Legal’s attorney-drafted templates with built-in IP assignment and confidentiality protections.
Get the Free Template →This is where most businesses either protect themselves completely or leave themselves wide open. Here's the exact checklist we use when drafting contractor agreements that actually hold up.
"A website" isn't enough. You need to list exactly what you're paying for: Figma design files, HTML/CSS/JavaScript source code, image assets, font licenses, content management system setup, API documentation, user guides — everything.
Why this matters: if your agreement says "web design" but doesn't mention source files, the contractor can deliver JPG screenshots and technically fulfill the contract. You'll own images of a website you can't edit or use.
What to include in your deliverables list:
Generic templates often use vague phrases like "Client will own the work." That's not legally sufficient. You need precise language that actually transfers intellectual property rights.
The magic words: "Contractor hereby assigns to Client all right, title, and interest in and to the work product, including all intellectual property rights." Don't skip "assigns" — it's the transfer mechanism. Don't skip "all right, title, and interest" — it's what you're acquiring.
Common template failures we see:
Ownership on paper means nothing if the contractor keeps the actual files. Your IP clause should explicitly require delivery of all source materials, not just final outputs.
We've seen businesses "own" a logo they can't edit because the designer kept the original Illustrator file. We've seen companies "own" software they can't maintain because the developer never handed over the repository access.
Specifically require delivery of:
Set a deadline for delivery — usually within 5-10 business days of final payment. Make late delivery a material breach that delays payment.
IP assignment transfers ownership. Confidentiality and non-compete clauses prevent misuse. They're different protections that work together.
Your confidentiality clause should cover not just the deliverables but also your business strategies, customer lists, pricing, technical architecture — anything the contractor learns while working with you. Make it survive termination of the agreement (typically 2-5 years after the relationship ends).
Confidentiality should prohibit:
Non-compete provisions are trickier — many states restrict them heavily. A better approach: non-solicitation (they can't recruit your employees or customers) and project-specific restrictions (they can't build the exact same thing for your direct competitor within 12-24 months).
This is the insurance policy most businesses forget. A further assurances clause obligates the contractor to sign any additional documents needed to perfect or enforce your ownership rights.
Why you need this: You might need to register a copyright years from now. You might need the contractor's signature on a patent application. You might need them to confirm ownership in writing to satisfy an investor or acquirer. Without a further assurances clause, you have to track them down and hope they cooperate.
Standard further assurances language:
"Contractor agrees to execute and deliver any additional documents and take any additional actions reasonably necessary to vest in Client complete ownership of the work product and intellectual property rights, including execution of copyright assignments, patent applications, or similar documents. Contractor appoints Client as attorney-in-fact to execute such documents on Contractor's behalf if Contractor becomes unavailable or uncooperative."
That last part — the power of attorney — is crucial. It lets you sign on their behalf if they disappear or refuse to cooperate.
You can't enforce a contract you can't find. Most businesses sign agreements, file them away, and then can't locate them when there's a dispute three years later.
Create a system now. Keep digital copies in cloud storage with controlled access. Tag them with the contractor's name, project, and date. If you amend the agreement later, keep both versions and document what changed.
What to track for each contractor:
If you ever need to prove ownership in court or to a buyer, you'll need this paper trail. Assume the contractor will claim they never signed or that the terms were different. Having organized records eliminates that argument.
Our editable Independent Contractor Agreement includes all six of these protections built-in. Define deliverables, transfer IP automatically, require source file delivery, and protect your confidential information — all in one attorney-drafted template.
Attorney-drafted • Fully customizable • IP protection built-in
Fair contracts protect both sides. Even with full IP assignment, contractors can negotiate limited rights to display work samples in their portfolio. This is reasonable — designers and developers need to show what they've built.
You can address this explicitly: allow portfolio use but prohibit commercial reuse or licensing to third parties. Let them show screenshots but not download links. Give them credit but keep ownership.
Contractors also typically retain rights to generic tools, processes, and know-how they bring to the project. If a developer uses a coding framework they created before working with you, they keep that. What they can't do is reuse the specific implementation they built for your business.
In some jurisdictions, creators have "moral rights" — the right to attribution or to prevent distortion of their work. The U.S. recognizes this narrowly (mostly for visual art), but if you're working with international contractors, you might need to address it. Most contracts include a waiver of moral rights where legally permitted.
Here's what a complete IP assignment clause looks like in practice, with annotations showing what each part does.
Alternative for Collaborative Work: If you're working on something where the contractor contributes their pre-existing IP, you might use an exclusive license instead. This lets them keep underlying ownership while giving you exclusive rights to use and modify the final product. Most businesses prefer full assignment, but licenses work for specific situations.
Payment doesn't equal ownership. This is the single most misunderstood aspect of contractor relationships, and it costs businesses thousands in buybacks, legal fees, and lost work.
Intellectual property must be transferred in writing. There's no implied transfer just because you paid for the work. If it's not in your contract, you don't own it — you're just renting it.
Always include an IP assignment clause before work begins. Make it specific, make it clear, and make sure it's signed. Check your existing contractor agreements — if they're missing this language, fix them now before you have a problem.
Make sure your Independent Contractor Agreements clearly assign ownership of every design, deliverable, or piece of code. With SMVRT Legal, you can customize attorney-drafted contracts that protect your intellectual property — before the work even begins.
Get Your Agreement Template →Need a standalone IP Assignment Agreement for existing work? Start here.
For more information on work for hire doctrine and copyright ownership, see the U.S. Copyright Office's Circular 9: Work Made for Hire.
Legal Note: This article is provided for educational and general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.
Laws and worker-classification rules vary by jurisdiction and may change over time. You should consult a licensed attorney for advice specific to your situation.
SMVRT Legal is a legal-technology platform that provides contract templates, tools, and access to general legal guidance. Read our full Legal Disclaimer.
Need help reviewing or creating a contractor agreement? Create a free account to get started.