How to Write a Kill Fee Clause (When Projects Get Canceled)
You’re three weeks into a project. The client suddenly goes silent. Then: “We’re pivoting. We don’t need this anymore.”
You’ve already invested 30 hours. Now what?
Without a kill fee clause, the answer is usually: nothing. You eat the loss.
With one? You get compensated for work already done—even if the final deliverable never ships.
This guide shows you exactly how to write a kill fee clause that protects your time without scaring off legitimate clients.
What Is a Kill Fee?
A kill fee is partial compensation when a client cancels a project before completion.
Think of it as severance pay for projects.
Common structures:
– Percentage-based: 25-50% of total project fee
– Milestone-based: Payment for completed phases
– Hourly floor: Minimum hours billed regardless of completion
The key: you get paid for work already performed, even if they never use it.
Why You Need One (Beyond Obvious Reasons)
Scenario 1: Client runs out of budget mid-project
Scenario 2: Internal politics kill the project
Scenario 3: They hire someone cheaper to finish your work
Scenario 4: Company gets acquired and priorities shift
In every case, you didn’t fail. The project circumstances changed.
A kill fee clause makes it clear: you’re billing for your time, not just final deliverables.
Basic Kill Fee Language
Here’s a starter template:
> Project Cancellation:
> If Client cancels this project after work has begun, Client agrees to pay a kill fee equal to [percentage]% of the total project fee, or payment for all milestones completed to date, whichever is greater.
Percentage recommendations:
– 25%: For projects under $5K (balances protection with accessibility)
– 50%: For projects over $10K or longer than 1 month
– 100% of work completed: For hourly or milestone-based contracts
> Cancellation & Kill Fees:
> Client may cancel this project at any time with written notice. Upon cancellation, Client will pay for all completed milestones plus 50% of the fee for any milestone currently in progress.
>
> Milestones:
> 1. Discovery & strategy ($2,000) — due upon completion
> 2. Design mockups ($3,000) — due upon client approval
> 3. Development ($5,000) — due upon launch
Why this works:
– Client knows exactly what they’ll owe at each stage
– You’re protected even if they cancel mid-milestone
– Clear payment triggers reduce disputes
The “Minimum Hours” Floor
For open-ended or consulting projects, set a billing floor:
> Cancellation Policy:
> If Client terminates this agreement, Client agrees to pay for all hours worked to date, with a minimum of [X] hours billed regardless of project completion.
Example: 10-hour minimum on a 40-hour project means you’re guaranteed $1,000 (at $100/hr) even if they cancel after week one.
When to use this:
– Retainers
– Ongoing advisory work
– Projects with unclear scope
– Clients with history of scope changes
What NOT to Do
❌ “Non-refundable deposit” without kill fee language
→ Deposits cover getting started. Kill fees cover the middle.
❌ Making the kill fee 100% of project cost
→ Clients won’t sign. Aim for fair compensation, not punishment.
❌ Leaving cancellation terms vague
→ “We’ll work something out” = you’ll work for free.
How to Present It to Clients
Bad: “I need a kill fee in case you flake.”
Good: “This clause protects both of us if project circumstances change. You’re only paying for work I’ve actually completed—nothing more.”
Key framing:
– Emphasize fairness (they don’t pay for work you didn’t do)
– Normalize it (“industry standard for projects this size”)
– Tie it to milestones, not arbitrary penalties
Most professional clients understand. The ones who push back hard are often the ones you’ll need it with.
Real-World Example
Project: Website redesign, $12K total
Milestones: Strategy ($3K), Design ($4K), Development ($5K)
Client canceled after design phase:
– ✅ Strategy complete: $3K paid
– ✅ Design complete: $4K paid
– ⏸️ Development not started: $0 owed
Kill fee clause result: $7K paid (58% of total), zero dispute.
Without clause: Client might argue they only owe for “usable” deliverables, leaving you fighting for the $4K design fee.
Pairing Kill Fees With Scope Protections
Kill fees work best alongside:
1. Change order clauses (additional work = additional cost)
- Payment milestones (money in hand before next phase)
- Deliverable definitions (what “done” means at each stage)
Together, these create a contract where:
– Clients can’t infinitely revise
– You’re paid as you go
– Cancellations don’t bankrupt you
State-Specific Notes
Most states enforce kill fee clauses as long as they’re:
– Reasonable (50% is generally safe, 100% may be challenged)
– Clear (specific language, not “subject to negotiation”)
– Signed (verbal agreements won’t hold up)
California note: Kill fees are standard in entertainment/media contracts. Courts generally uphold them for creative services.
New York note: Similar—just make sure the fee is proportional to work performed.
If you’re working with clients in multiple states, include a jurisdiction clause specifying which state’s law applies.
When Clients Push Back
“We’re not going to cancel, so we don’t need this.”
→ “Great! Then it’ll never come up. But my contract template includes it for all projects.”
“Can we remove the kill fee clause?”
→ “I can lower the percentage from 50% to 25%, but I need some protection if circumstances change.”
“This feels like you don’t trust us.”
→ “It’s not about trust—it’s about making sure we’re both clear on what happens if the project scope shifts.”
If they refuse entirely, that’s a red flag. Proceed with extreme caution (or walk).
Bottom Line
A kill fee clause doesn’t prevent cancellations. It just makes sure you’re not eating ramen for a month when they do.
Standard language:
– 25-50% of total fee, OR
– Payment for completed milestones, whichever is greater
Best practice:
– Tie it to clear project phases
– Present it as fair protection for both sides
– Make it non-negotiable for projects over $5K
Your time has value—even when the project doesn’t finish.
Not legal advice. LawAmie is built by a practicing attorney, but this tool does not create an attorney-client relationship. For specific legal questions, consult a licensed lawyer in your state.
Related Articles:
– [Client Won’t Pay? 5 Contract Clauses That Stop Payment Disputes](#)
– [How to Write a Scope of Work That Prevents Scope Creep](#)
– [Should You Require a Deposit? (And How Much?)](#)
