Terms & Conditions (B2B)

£595.00

Standard terms and conditions for businesses selling goods or services to other businesses. Once in place, you can use these across all your B2B relationships without drafting a new contract each time.

What’s included:

•       A consultation to understand your business, what you sell, and how you operate.

•       Drafting of B2B terms and conditions covering scope, pricing, payment, delivery, liability, warranties, IP, confidentiality, and termination.

•       One round of revisions based on your feedback.

•       Final version ready to use on your website or attach to proposals and invoices.

What’s not included:

•       Consumer-facing terms (see Terms & Conditions — Consumer/E-commerce).

•       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: What is the difference between B2B and consumer terms?

A: Consumer terms must comply with the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and other consumer protection legislation, which impose stricter requirements on fairness, cancellation rights, and liability. B2B terms have more commercial flexibility.

Standard terms and conditions for businesses selling goods or services to other businesses. Once in place, you can use these across all your B2B relationships without drafting a new contract each time.

What’s included:

•       A consultation to understand your business, what you sell, and how you operate.

•       Drafting of B2B terms and conditions covering scope, pricing, payment, delivery, liability, warranties, IP, confidentiality, and termination.

•       One round of revisions based on your feedback.

•       Final version ready to use on your website or attach to proposals and invoices.

What’s not included:

•       Consumer-facing terms (see Terms & Conditions — Consumer/E-commerce).

•       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: What is the difference between B2B and consumer terms?

A: Consumer terms must comply with the Consumer Rights Act 2015 and other consumer protection legislation, which impose stricter requirements on fairness, cancellation rights, and liability. B2B terms have more commercial flexibility.