What is a work-for-hire agreement?
A work-for-hire agreement transfers all ownership of creative work to the person or company who paid for it. The creator gives up their rights in exchange for a fee.
How it works
The hiring party pays a fee. The contractor does the work. Upon completion and payment, all rights — including copyright, reproduction, and distribution — transfer to the hiring party. The contractor retains no ownership.
When to use one
- Hiring a session musician for a flat fee
- Commissioning a beat or instrumental
- Hiring a designer for artwork or visuals
- Paying a mixing or mastering engineer
- Any arrangement where the creator is paid and gives up ownership
Ready to draft your agreement?
Create agreementWork-for-hire vs. co-ownership
Work-for-hire: one party owns everything. The creator is paid and walks away. Co-ownership: multiple parties share rights based on percentages. For co-ownership, use a split sheet or co-writer agreement. For work-for-hire, use a work-for-hire agreement.
How to create one
Use the work-for-hire agreement generator to add parties, define payment terms, and include the ownership transfer clause. Preview the agreement in real time and download a professional PDF.
Create a work-for-hire agreement
Define payment, ownership transfer, and signature lines in minutes.
CAZEN is free for now.
Continue your workflow
Use these tools to put what you learned into practice.
Work-for-Hire Agreement Generator
Create a work-for-hire agreement for creative contractors.
Create agreementSplit Sheet Generator
Create a split sheet PDF with names, roles, and percentages.
Create split sheetCo-Writer Agreement Generator
Draft a co-writing agreement with custom terms and signature lines.
Draft agreementProducer Split Calculator
Estimate fair producer ownership based on role and contribution type.
Estimate producer split