Terms and conditions: services (pro-supplier)
Terms and Conditions for the supply of services between businesses, both of whom are within the UK, governed by English law. The Terms and Conditions have been prepared more for the benefit of the supplier than the client/customer.
Read moreWhen do I use this document?
- if you are a regular supplier of services to business clients or customers
- where both the supplier and client/customer are based in the UK
- if you want terms and conditions prepared more for the benefit of the supplier than the client/customer
What are the key features?
- 22 paragraphs over 8 pages
- contract and incorporation: provisions detailing what the contract comprises and how the Terms and Conditions are incorporated into the contract
- provisions relating to commencement date and duration, supplier’s service obligations, customer’s obligations and fees and payment
- exclusions and limitations on supplier’s liability
- force majeure and termination clauses
- restriction on customer soliciting supplier’s staff involved in the provision of the services
What else do I need to know?
A business which provides services to business clients on a regular basis will likely require a pre-prepared set of contractual terms which it will seek to apply to its business transactions and dealings.
Businesses will use Terms and Conditions for the following principal reasons:
- so that they have a consistent set of contractual terms which apply to their business dealings
- to seek to avoid or limit negotiation or discussion with clients and customers on the contractual terms
- to prevent the client or customer’s Terms and Conditions from applying to the contract
How should a party apply its Terms and Conditions?
Terms and Conditions will only apply to a contract if they have been incorporated into the contract.
In the absence of a signed contract which either sets out the Terms and Conditions, it is important that a service provider applies a consistent and practice in all pre-contract discussions and negotiations. This should include identifying in its own pre-contract documents, for example quotations or purchase orders, that its Terms and Conditions will apply to any contract and to provide a copy of them to the client or customer. If the client or customer provides or refers to its own Terms and Conditions, for example in the customer’s own purchase order, the customer’s Terms and Conditions could apply if no objection or response is made by the service provider to the effect that its own Terms and Conditions should apply.
If both parties insist on their own Terms and Conditions applying, the preferable solution is to try and negotiate the differences between the two sets of Terms and Conditions so as to reach a mutually acceptable position on the basis of one party’s amended Terms and Conditions.
What is the battle of the forms?
The battle of the forms arises where both parties to the contract seek to apply their own Terms and Conditions. The answer to the question as to which should apply will generally depend on when the contract was concluded and whose Terms and Conditions had been incorporated into the contract at that stage. Often, this will be the party which last put forward its Terms and Conditions (assuming the other party had not expressly rejected them) – who has fired the “last shot”.
What terms are implied in contracts for the provision of services?
Unlike a contract for the sale of goods, relatively few terms are implied in a contract for the supply of services.
The principal applicable statute is the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 (“SGSA”). This implies the following terms in a B2B contract for the supply of services:
- reasonable care and skill: that the supplier will carry out the services with reasonable care and skill
- time for performance: if the contract is not fixed by the contract, left to be fixed in a manner agreed by the contract or determined by the course of dealing between the parties, that the supplier will carry out the service within a reasonable time
- consideration: if the price for the services is not fixed by the contract, left to be fixed in a manner agreed by the contract or determined by the course of dealing between the parties, that the customer will pay a reasonable charge for the services
Can the SGSA implied terms be excluded or restricted?
Yes, under the SGSA and subject to the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 (“UCTA”), the terms implied by the SGSA can be excluded or varied by the contract itself, by the course of dealing between the parties or by usage.
In practical terms, the only implied term which is likely to be relevant is the implied term to use reasonable skill and care – the subject matter of the other implied terms is likely to be covered by the express terms of the contract.
Often, a supplier’s own terms and conditions will in any event expressly state that the services will provided with reasonable skill and care.
Exclusion clauses
Generally, exclusion clauses and liability limitation clauses in contracts for the supply of services are subject to the requirements of UCTA and are discussed in more details in
What other documents are available?
For Terms and Conditions which are more for the benefit of the client/customer, see
When do I use this document?
- if you are a regular supplier of services to business clients or customers
- where both the supplier and client/customer are based in the UK
- if you want terms and conditions prepared more for the benefit of the supplier than the client/customer
What are the key features?
- 22 paragraphs over 8 pages
- contract and incorporation: provisions detailing what the contract comprises and how the Terms and Conditions are incorporated into the contract
- provisions relating to commencement date and duration, supplier’s service obligations, customer’s obligations and fees and payment
- exclusions and limitations on supplier’s liability
- force majeure and termination clauses
- restriction on customer soliciting supplier’s staff involved in the provision of the services
What else do I need to know?
A business which provides services to business clients on a regular basis will likely require a pre-prepared set of contractual terms which it will seek to apply to its business transactions and dealings.
Businesses will use Terms and Conditions for the following principal reasons:
- so that they have a consistent set of contractual terms which apply to their business dealings
- to seek to avoid or limit negotiation or discussion with clients and customers on the contractual terms
- to prevent the client or customer’s Terms and Conditions from applying to the contract
How should a party apply its Terms and Conditions?
Terms and Conditions will only apply to a contract if they have been incorporated into the contract.
In the absence of a signed contract which either sets out the Terms and Conditions, it is important that a service provider applies a consistent and practice in all pre-contract discussions and negotiations. This should include identifying in its own pre-contract documents, for example quotations or purchase orders, that its Terms and Conditions will apply to any contract and to provide a copy of them to the client or customer. If the client or customer provides or refers to its own Terms and Conditions, for example in the customer’s own purchase order, the customer’s Terms and Conditions could apply if no objection or response is made by the service provider to the effect that its own Terms and Conditions should apply.
If both parties insist on their own Terms and Conditions applying, the preferable solution is to try and negotiate the differences between the two sets of Terms and Conditions so as to reach a mutually acceptable position on the basis of one party’s amended Terms and Conditions.
What is the battle of the forms?
The battle of the forms arises where both parties to the contract seek to apply their own Terms and Conditions. The answer to the question as to which should apply will generally depend on when the contract was concluded and whose Terms and Conditions had been incorporated into the contract at that stage. Often, this will be the party which last put forward its Terms and Conditions (assuming the other party had not expressly rejected them) – who has fired the “last shot”.
What terms are implied in contracts for the provision of services?
Unlike a contract for the sale of goods, relatively few terms are implied in a contract for the supply of services.
The principal applicable statute is the Supply of Goods and Services Act 1982 (“SGSA”). This implies the following terms in a B2B contract for the supply of services:
- reasonable care and skill: that the supplier will carry out the services with reasonable care and skill
- time for performance: if the contract is not fixed by the contract, left to be fixed in a manner agreed by the contract or determined by the course of dealing between the parties, that the supplier will carry out the service within a reasonable time
- consideration: if the price for the services is not fixed by the contract, left to be fixed in a manner agreed by the contract or determined by the course of dealing between the parties, that the customer will pay a reasonable charge for the services
Can the SGSA implied terms be excluded or restricted?
Yes, under the SGSA and subject to the Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 (“UCTA”), the terms implied by the SGSA can be excluded or varied by the contract itself, by the course of dealing between the parties or by usage.
In practical terms, the only implied term which is likely to be relevant is the implied term to use reasonable skill and care – the subject matter of the other implied terms is likely to be covered by the express terms of the contract.
Often, a supplier’s own terms and conditions will in any event expressly state that the services will provided with reasonable skill and care.
Exclusion clauses
Generally, exclusion clauses and liability limitation clauses in contracts for the supply of services are subject to the requirements of UCTA and are discussed in more details in
What other documents are available?
For Terms and Conditions which are more for the benefit of the client/customer, see
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Updated by a lawyer on 03/09/2024
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