Joint Venture Agreement — Drafting — £950
A contractual joint venture agreement between two parties, setting out each party’s contributions, responsibilities, profit-sharing, governance, and exit arrangements. Suitable for project-based collaborations, co-development arrangements, and commercial partnerships that do not require a separate joint venture company.
What’s included:
• A consultation to understand the joint venture, each party’s contributions, and the commercial objectives.
• Drafting of a contractual joint venture agreement for two parties, covering scope and objectives, contributions (financial, IP, personnel), management and decision-making, profit and loss sharing, IP ownership and licensing, confidentiality, term, termination, and exit.
• One round of revisions based on your feedback.
• Final version ready for execution.
What’s not included:
• Joint ventures involving three or more parties (I can quote separately).
• Incorporated joint ventures requiring a new company to be formed (additional corporate documents required).
• Regulatory approvals or competition law advice.
• Negotiation with the other party beyond the scope described above.
• Tax advice (including VAT, corporation tax, income tax, capital gains tax, and stamp duty). If specialist tax advice is needed, I can recommend a suitable accountant or tax adviser.
FAQ
Q: Contractual JV or incorporated JV — which do I need?
A: A contractual JV is an agreement between the parties without creating a separate company. An incorporated JV involves setting up a new company owned by the JV partners. Contractual JVs are simpler and more flexible; incorporated JVs provide limited liability and a clearer separation of the venture’s assets and liabilities.
Joint Venture Agreement — Drafting — £950
A contractual joint venture agreement between two parties, setting out each party’s contributions, responsibilities, profit-sharing, governance, and exit arrangements. Suitable for project-based collaborations, co-development arrangements, and commercial partnerships that do not require a separate joint venture company.
What’s included:
• A consultation to understand the joint venture, each party’s contributions, and the commercial objectives.
• Drafting of a contractual joint venture agreement for two parties, covering scope and objectives, contributions (financial, IP, personnel), management and decision-making, profit and loss sharing, IP ownership and licensing, confidentiality, term, termination, and exit.
• One round of revisions based on your feedback.
• Final version ready for execution.
What’s not included:
• Joint ventures involving three or more parties (I can quote separately).
• Incorporated joint ventures requiring a new company to be formed (additional corporate documents required).
• Regulatory approvals or competition law advice.
• Negotiation with the other party beyond the scope described above.
• Tax advice (including VAT, corporation tax, income tax, capital gains tax, and stamp duty). If specialist tax advice is needed, I can recommend a suitable accountant or tax adviser.
FAQ
Q: Contractual JV or incorporated JV — which do I need?
A: A contractual JV is an agreement between the parties without creating a separate company. An incorporated JV involves setting up a new company owned by the JV partners. Contractual JVs are simpler and more flexible; incorporated JVs provide limited liability and a clearer separation of the venture’s assets and liabilities.