A ready-to-use influencer agreement covering scope of work, compensation, content approval, usage rights, FTC disclosure, exclusivity, and termination. Updated for 2026 regulations including AI-generated content disclosure.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 13 min
Influencer contract: A legally binding agreement between a brand and a content creator that defines deliverables, compensation, content ownership, usage rights, disclosure requirements, and the terms under which either party can exit the arrangement.
| Clause | What It Covers | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Parties | Legal names, addresses, contact info | Establishes who’s bound by the contract |
| 2. Scope of Work | Deliverables, platforms, formats, timeline | Prevents “I thought you wanted 3 posts, not 5” |
| 3. Compensation | Fee, payment schedule, performance bonuses | 34% of payment disputes stem from unclear terms |
| 4. Content Approval | Draft submission, review period, revision limits | Avoids infinite revision loops |
| 5. Usage Rights | Where, how long, and in what formats the brand can reuse content | Biggest source of post-campaign conflict |
| 6. FTC Disclosure | Disclosure requirements, approved language, placement | Fines up to $53,088 per violation in 2025-2026 |
| 7. Exclusivity | Competitor restrictions, duration, category definition | Protects brand investment in creator partnerships |
| 8. AI Content | AI tool usage, disclosure of AI-generated elements | New FTC requirement in 2025-2026 |
| 9. Morals Clause | Brand-damaging behavior definitions, termination triggers | Protects brand reputation |
| 10. Termination | Exit conditions, notice periods, kill fees | Clean exits without burning bridges |
| 11. Confidentiality | Non-disclosure of campaign details, product info | Prevents premature leaks of launches |
| 12. Payment Terms | Invoicing, net terms, late payment penalties | Cash flow clarity for both parties |
Get the complete 12-clause agreement in Google Docs format, plus the deliverables tracker, usage rights matrix, and FTC disclosure cheat sheet. Download Free Template →
One more critical point: morals clauses have become standard in 2026. These define what constitutes “brand-damaging behavior” and give the brand the right to terminate without payment if the creator’s public conduct materially harms the brand. The template includes a balanced morals clause that protects the brand without being overly restrictive on the creator’s personal expression.“The FTC issued formal actions against 15 influencer campaigns in the first half of 2025 alone, with penalties ranging from $10,000 to over $100,000. An influencer contract isn’t just about scope and payment anymore. It’s risk management. Every clause either protects you or exposes you.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
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Yes. Any paid influencer collaboration should have a written contract, regardless of the campaign size. Without a contract, you have no legal protection on content ownership, usage rights, posting timelines, or FTC compliance. Even micro-influencer campaigns under $500 should use a simplified agreement covering at minimum: deliverables, payment terms, usage rights, and disclosure requirements.
The FTC requires clear and conspicuous disclosure of any material connection between a brand and creator. Approved disclosures include #ad, #sponsored, or “Paid partnership with [brand]” placed where viewers will see it without searching. In 2025-2026, the FTC also requires disclosure of AI-generated content elements. Violations can result in fines up to $53,088 per post, and the FTC issued a 40% increase in enforcement actions in 2025.
Structure usage rights in tiers. Tier 1: organic repost on brand’s social channels for 90 days. Tier 2: organic plus paid amplification for 12 months. Tier 3: all channels including website, email, and print in perpetuity. Each tier costs more. Most brands need at least Tier 2 because 56% of influencer investment is specifically to generate repurposable content. Define the channels, duration, and geographic scope explicitly in the contract.
A common framework is 15-25% of the base campaign fee for every 30 days of exclusivity. So if a creator’s campaign fee is $5,000 and you want 90 days of exclusivity in the skincare category, budget an additional $2,250-$3,750 on top of the base fee. Always define the exclusivity category narrowly. “Beauty” is too broad. “Skincare brands selling directly to consumers in the US” is appropriately specific.
The contract should define remedies for breach. Common clauses include: content removal within 24 hours of notice, return of fees paid for undelivered content, indemnification for FTC fines or legal costs resulting from the creator’s non-compliance, and a morals clause allowing termination without payment if the creator’s conduct materially damages the brand. Specify these remedies in writing; verbal agreements are nearly impossible to enforce.
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