Contract Clauses17 min read

How to Review a Contract for Red Flags: The Complete Lawyer’s Checklist

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How to Review a Contract for Red Flags: The Complete Lawyer’s Checklist

A single missed clause in a 40-page MSA cost one solo practitioner’s client $340,000 in uncapped indemnification exposure last year. The clause was buried on page 27, between a standard notice provision and a boilerplate severability section. The lawyer reviewed the contract in two hours. The problematic indemnification language took 15 seconds to read — and a lifetime to regret.

According to the World Commerce & Contracting, poor contract management costs organizations 9% of their annual revenue on average. For a business doing $5 million a year, that’s $450,000 walking out the door because someone didn’t catch what was — or wasn’t — in the agreement.

This article gives you a systematic framework for catching every red flag, every time. Whether you’re reviewing your fifth contract this week or your fiftieth, the checklist below will make sure nothing slips through. Try Clause Labs Free to run this entire checklist with AI in under 60 seconds — or use the manual framework below.

The 5-Phase Contract Review Framework

Most lawyers read contracts start to finish. That’s how you miss things. A structured review catches what linear reading doesn’t. Here’s a five-phase approach with specific time allocations for a standard 15-25 page agreement:

Phase 1: Initial Scan (2 minutes) — Parties, dates, term, governing law. Confirm the basics are correct before you invest time in the substance.

Phase 2: Obligation Mapping (5 minutes) — Who owes what to whom, and when. Sketch the obligation flow. Asymmetric obligations jump out immediately when you map them visually.

Phase 3: Risk Identification (10 minutes) — The red flag hunt. This is where the 25 red flags below come in. Go through each category systematically.

Phase 4: Missing Protections (5 minutes) — What should be in the contract but isn’t. Missing clauses are often more dangerous than bad clauses, because you don’t notice what isn’t there.

Phase 5: Commercial Alignment (5 minutes) — Does the contract match the deal your client actually negotiated? Surprisingly often, it doesn’t.

Total: 27 minutes for a first-pass review. That’s the framework. Now here are the specific red flags to hunt for.

The 25 Contract Red Flags Every Lawyer Must Catch

Deal Structure Red Flags (1-5)

1. Ambiguous Definitions That Change Clause Meaning

Definitions sections are where contracts hide their teeth. A broadly defined term like “Confidential Information” that includes “all information shared between the parties, in any form” turns a simple NDA into a knowledge prison. Look for definitions that expand obligations beyond what the deal contemplates.

What to do: Compare each defined term against how it’s used throughout the agreement. If the definition is broader than the commercial intent, narrow it.

2. Inconsistent Defined Terms

When a contract uses “Services,” “Work,” and “Deliverables” interchangeably — or worse, when it defines “Services” in the definitions section but switches to “Work” in the liability provisions — obligations become ambiguous and disputes become likely.

What to do: Use Ctrl+F to search for each defined term. Flag any section that uses an undefined variant.

3. Missing or Incorrect Party Identification

Wrong entity names, missing parent/subsidiary distinctions, and absent guarantor provisions create enforcement nightmares. If your client is contracting with “ABC LLC” but the entity signing is “ABC Holdings Inc.,” you may have no recourse against the right party.

What to do: Verify exact legal entity names against state records. Confirm the signatory has authority. Check for necessary guarantees.

4. Term and Renewal Traps

Auto-renewal clauses with 90-day notice requirements are among the most expensive overlooked provisions in commercial contracts. Your client signs a 12-month agreement, forgets about the notice window, and is locked in for another year — often at an escalated rate.

What to do: Calendar every notice deadline. Flag any auto-renewal with a notice period exceeding 30 days. Check for rate escalation on renewal.

5. Conditions Precedent That Are Impossible to Satisfy

If performance obligations are conditioned on events your client can’t control — regulatory approvals, third-party consents, environmental clearances — the contract may be unperformable from day one.

What to do: List every condition precedent. For each, ask: “Can my client actually satisfy this? What happens if they can’t?”

Financial Red Flags (6-10)

6. Unlimited Liability Exposure

According to the ABA’s 2024 Legal Technology Survey, contract disputes remain the most common source of malpractice claims for transactional lawyers. A contract with no limitation of liability clause exposes your client to theoretically unlimited damages — and exposes you to a malpractice claim if you didn’t flag it.

What to do: If there’s no limitation of liability, add one. If there is one, check the cap amount against the deal size. For guidance on drafting these, see our guide to limitation of liability clauses.

7. One-Sided Indemnification

Mutual risks should carry mutual indemnification. When only your client indemnifies the counterparty — but not the reverse — the risk allocation is fundamentally unfair. This is especially common in vendor agreements where the vendor drafted the contract.

What to do: Make indemnification mutual for mutual risks (breach of reps, negligence, third-party IP claims). Reserve one-sided indemnification for risks only one party controls.

8. Hidden Fee Escalation Mechanisms

“Pricing subject to annual adjustment based on CPI” sounds reasonable until you realize CPI has averaged 3-4% annually in recent years. Over a 5-year contract, that compounds to a 15-20% increase. Worse are clauses that allow unilateral price increases with a “take it or leave it” termination option.

What to do: Calculate total cost over the full contract term, including escalations. Negotiate caps on annual increases.

9. Payment Terms That Create Cash Flow Risk

Net-90 payment terms mean your client funds three months of work before seeing a dime. Combined with milestone-based payment (where the counterparty controls milestone acceptance), cash flow exposure can be devastating for small businesses.

What to do: Push for Net-30 or Net-45. Negotiate progress payments rather than milestone-based payments. Include late payment interest provisions.

10. Liquidated Damages That Function as Penalties

Liquidated damages clauses are enforceable when they represent a reasonable estimate of anticipated loss. When they’re disproportionate to actual likely damages, courts may strike them as unenforceable penalties — but that costs time and money to litigate. Under UCC Section 2-718, liquidated damages must be reasonable in light of anticipated or actual harm.

What to do: Compare the liquidated damages amount against realistic loss estimates. If it’s punitive rather than compensatory, negotiate it down or remove it.

Termination Red Flags (11-15)

11. No Termination for Cause Right

If your client has no right to terminate when the counterparty breaches, they’re trapped in a contract even when the other side isn’t performing. This is shockingly common in vendor-drafted agreements.

What to do: Insist on mutual termination for material breach with a reasonable cure period (typically 30 days for non-payment, 15 days for other material breaches).

12. Unreasonable Cure Periods

A 90-day cure period for material breach means your client must tolerate non-performance for three months before they can exit. For a critical vendor relationship, that’s an eternity.

What to do: Negotiate cure periods that match the severity and type of breach. Payment breaches: 10-15 days. Performance breaches: 30 days. No cure period for breaches of confidentiality or IP provisions.

13. Termination Penalties That Exceed Actual Damages

Early termination fees of “all remaining payments due under the contract term” are penalties disguised as damages. If your client terminates a 36-month contract after 6 months, they shouldn’t owe 30 months of fees for services they’ll never receive.

What to do: Negotiate reasonable wind-down fees (1-3 months of fees) rather than “remaining balance” penalties. Include termination for convenience provisions in long-term agreements.

14. Post-Termination Obligations That Survive Indefinitely

Survival clauses that state “Sections 5, 7, 9, 12, 14, 16, 18, and 21 shall survive termination” without any time limitation can create perpetual obligations. Confidentiality obligations surviving for 10 years may be reasonable; indemnification surviving forever is not.

What to do: Specify survival periods for each surviving section. Match the survival period to the nature of the obligation.

15. No Termination for Convenience

In long-term contracts, business needs change. Without a termination for convenience clause, your client may be locked into a 5-year agreement with a vendor they no longer need — paying full price for services that have become irrelevant.

What to do: Negotiate termination for convenience with 60-90 days’ notice in any agreement exceeding 12 months. Accept a reasonable early termination fee if necessary.

Intellectual Property Red Flags (16-19)

16. Overly Broad IP Assignment

An IP assignment clause that captures “all intellectual property created during the term of this agreement” — without limiting it to work created under the agreement — may sweep in your client’s pre-existing IP, side projects, and independently developed technology.

What to do: Limit IP assignment to work product created specifically under the contract. Require a schedule of pre-existing IP that’s explicitly excluded. For work-for-hire provisions, verify they meet the requirements of 17 U.S.C. Section 101.

17. Work-for-Hire Misclassification

Calling something “work made for hire” doesn’t make it so under copyright law. Work-for-hire status applies only to works created by employees within the scope of employment, or to specific categories of commissioned works where there’s a written agreement. Misclassifying the relationship can leave IP ownership unclear.

What to do: Verify the work falls within one of the statutory categories for work-for-hire. If it doesn’t, use an express assignment instead.

18. No License-Back After IP Assignment

When your client assigns IP to the counterparty (common in development agreements), they may lose the ability to use methods, processes, or technology they need for other clients. A license-back provision ensures your client retains the right to use the IP they created.

What to do: Negotiate a perpetual, non-exclusive, royalty-free license-back for any assigned IP that your client needs for their ongoing business.

19. IP Indemnification Gaps

If the counterparty is providing technology, they should indemnify your client against third-party IP infringement claims. If this indemnification is missing — or is capped at a trivially low amount — your client bears the risk of someone else’s IP problems.

What to do: Require IP indemnification from any party providing technology, software, or creative work. Ensure IP indemnification is carved out from general liability caps.

Liability and Risk Red Flags (20-25)

20. Missing Limitation of Liability

No liability cap means unlimited exposure. Period. According to Gartner’s research on legal technology, contract disputes over uncapped liability are among the most expensive commercial litigation categories.

What to do: Every commercial contract needs a limitation of liability. Our guide to contract clauses that cause costly mistakes breaks down how to draft effective caps.

21. Liability Cap Set Too Low

A $50,000 liability cap on a $2 million services engagement is worse than no cap at all — it gives your client a false sense of protection while effectively eliminating any meaningful remedy.

What to do: The cap should be proportionate to the deal. Common ranges: 1x-3x the contract value for services, 12-24 months of fees for subscription agreements.

22. Insurance Requirements Mismatched to Risk

If the contract requires $1 million in professional liability insurance but the liability cap is $5 million, the insurance doesn’t cover the exposure. These provisions need to work together.

What to do: Align insurance minimums with liability caps. Verify your client can actually obtain the required coverage. Negotiate mutual insurance requirements.

23. Force Majeure That’s Too Narrow or Missing

Post-2020, force majeure clauses deserve careful attention. A clause that only covers “acts of God, war, and government action” may not include pandemics, supply chain disruptions, or cyberattacks — events that have become routine business risks.

What to do: Ensure force majeure covers current realistic risks. Include pandemics, epidemics, cyberattacks, supply chain disruptions, and utility failures. Specify notice requirements and the right to terminate after a prolonged force majeure event.

24. One-Sided Consequential Damages Waiver

A mutual consequential damages waiver is standard. A one-sided waiver — where the counterparty excludes its liability for consequential damages but your client does not — is a red flag. Your client absorbs all indirect loss risk while the counterparty walks away.

What to do: Make consequential damages waivers mutual, or negotiate carve-outs for specific high-risk scenarios (data breach, IP infringement, confidentiality breach).

25. Dispute Resolution That Favors One Party

Mandatory arbitration in the counterparty’s home jurisdiction, with the counterparty selecting the arbitration provider, under rules that limit discovery — this is dispute resolution designed to discourage claims, not resolve them.

What to do: Negotiate neutral venue (or plaintiff’s choice). Ensure the arbitration provider is mutually agreed upon. Preserve the right to seek injunctive relief in court. Consider whether litigation is more favorable than arbitration for your client’s likely claims.

The 10 Most Commonly Missing Clauses

Missing clauses are harder to catch than bad clauses, because there’s nothing on the page to trigger your attention. Here are the provisions most often absent from contracts that should contain them:

  1. Limitation of liability — Absent in roughly 15% of commercial contracts, per World Commerce & Contracting data
  2. Termination for cause — The contract has termination for convenience but not for breach
  3. Data protection / privacy provisions — Critical in any contract involving personal data
  4. Insurance requirements — Common in services agreements to be left unaddressed
  5. Representations and warranties — Vendor contracts that make no reps about service quality
  6. Notice provisions — How to deliver notices, and to whom
  7. Assignment restrictions — Your client’s counterparty sells the business, and suddenly they’re dealing with a stranger
  8. Confidentiality provisions — In agreements that involve sharing proprietary information but lack a standalone NDA
  9. Dispute resolution mechanism — Defaults to litigation in an unpredictable forum
  10. Governing law — Two parties in different states with no choice of law provision is a recipe for conflict

For a detailed framework on catching missing clauses quickly, see our guide on how to review a contract in 10 minutes.

Red Flags by Contract Type: Quick Reference

Different agreements carry different risks. Here are the top five red flags specific to the most common contract types:

NDAs

  1. Overbroad definition of “Confidential Information” (captures everything, including public knowledge)
  2. Non-compete or non-solicitation riders hidden in confidentiality language
  3. Perpetual confidentiality obligations with no exceptions
  4. Missing standard exclusions (publicly available info, independently developed info)
  5. One-sided obligations in what should be a mutual NDA

For a complete NDA review framework, see how to review a contract for NDA-specific issues.

Employment Agreements

  1. Non-compete clauses that exceed state law limitations — California (Bus. & Prof. Code Section 16600) generally voids them, while Florida (Fla. Stat. Section 542.335) enforces them with specific requirements
  2. IP assignment that captures personal inventions unrelated to employment
  3. At-will language contradicted by termination-for-cause provisions elsewhere in the agreement
  4. Clawback provisions for bonuses or commissions that are unreasonably broad
  5. Arbitration clauses that waive the right to pursue statutory discrimination claims

Master Service Agreements (MSAs)

  1. Indemnification that sits outside the liability cap (unlimited indemnification exposure)
  2. Order of precedence clauses that make the MSA control over SOWs — even when the SOW was intended to override
  3. Assignment restrictions that block your client’s ability to undergo an M&A transaction
  4. Auto-renewal with 90-day notice requirements buried in the term section
  5. Audit rights with unreasonable scope (financial records, client lists, internal communications)

SaaS Agreements

  1. Data ownership provisions that give the vendor rights to aggregate or use customer data
  2. SLA credits as the sole remedy for downtime (credits don’t compensate for lost business)
  3. Unilateral right to modify terms, pricing, or features with minimal notice
  4. No data portability or migration assistance on termination
  5. Broad indemnification for “misuse” without clear definition of prohibited use

For AI-assisted SaaS agreement review, see our SaaS agreement review guide.

Vendor Agreements

  1. Limitation of liability capped at “fees paid in the prior month” (trivially low)
  2. Vendor’s right to substitute personnel without client approval
  3. No service level commitments or performance metrics
  4. Broad “change of scope” provisions that allow price increases without clear triggers
  5. Termination provisions that require the client to pay for work-in-progress at full rate even upon vendor’s material breach

How Experienced Lawyers Prioritize Red Flags

Not all red flags carry equal weight. Senior transactional lawyers triage issues using a simple priority framework:

Priority Criteria Examples Action
Critical Financial exposure > 50% of deal value, or creates regulatory/malpractice risk Uncapped liability, missing indemnification, IP assignment of pre-existing IP, non-compete violations Must be resolved before signing. Walk away if counterparty won’t negotiate.
Important Creates meaningful risk but manageable with negotiation One-sided termination rights, unfavorable jurisdiction, weak cure periods, narrow force majeure Negotiate. Accept only with client’s informed consent about the risk.
Minor Technical issues unlikely to cause real-world problems Imprecise but clear-enough language, non-standard formatting, minor definition inconsistencies Note in your review memo. Flag for the client but don’t let it hold up the deal.

The formula: Likelihood of the issue arising x Magnitude of impact if it does = Priority level.

A perpetual survival clause on a minor non-solicitation provision in a low-value contract? Minor. Uncapped indemnification in a $5 million technology implementation? Critical. Adjust your attention accordingly.

How AI Contract Review Catches What You Miss

Even experienced lawyers miss 3-5 issues per contract review on average, according to a Stanford CodeX study on legal document review. Fatigue, time pressure, and the sheer volume of contracts that flow through a solo practice all contribute.

AI contract review tools don’t get tired at 11 PM. They don’t skip the definitions section because the client needs the markup by morning. They check every clause against a risk framework, every time.

Clause Labs runs this entire checklist — all 25 red flags plus missing clause detection — in under 60 seconds. Upload any contract and get a clause-by-clause risk report with severity ratings (Critical, High, Medium, Low) and specific recommendations for each flagged issue.

The AI handles the first pass. You apply the judgment, business context, and client-specific advice that no algorithm can replicate. That’s the workflow: AI does the scanning; you do the lawyering.

As the ABA’s guidance on technology competence (Model Rule 1.1, Comment 8) makes clear, lawyers have a duty to “keep abreast of changes in the law and its practice, including the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology.” AI-assisted review isn’t replacing your judgment — it’s helping you meet your competence obligations.

For more on using AI ethically in contract review, see our guide on whether AI contract review is ethical.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the most commonly missed contract red flag?

Missing limitation of liability clauses. Lawyers tend to focus on what’s in the contract, not what’s absent. A contract with no liability cap exposes your client to unlimited damages — and according to Clio’s 2025 Legal Trends Report, contract disputes are a leading source of malpractice claims for solo practitioners.

How long should a thorough contract review take?

For a standard 15-25 page commercial agreement, budget 45-90 minutes for a complete review using the five-phase framework above. The 27-minute first pass catches structural and high-priority issues; the remaining time is for detailed clause-level analysis and drafting redline comments. AI tools can reduce the first pass to under 2 minutes, leaving you more time for substantive analysis.

Should I use a checklist for every contract review?

Yes — even if you’ve reviewed hundreds of contracts. Pilots use pre-flight checklists even after 10,000 hours of flight time. The point isn’t that you’ve forgotten how to review a contract; it’s that systematic process catches what memory and habit miss. The 25 red flags and 10 missing clauses in this article work as that checklist.

What if I find a critical red flag — do I redline or reject the entire contract?

It depends on the issue and your client’s leverage. For most critical red flags, a targeted redline with explanation is the professional approach. However, if the contract contains multiple critical red flags and the counterparty is unwilling to negotiate any of them, advising your client to walk away is legitimate counsel. Document your analysis either way.

How do I explain contract red flags to non-lawyer clients?

Translate legal risk into business impact using dollar figures. Don’t say “the indemnification clause is one-sided.” Say “this clause means if their product fails and a customer sues, your company pays the legal bills — which could be $50,000 to $500,000 depending on the claim.” Clients understand money. They don’t understand legal terminology. For tools that generate plain-English risk explanations automatically, try Clause Labs’s free analyzer — the Free tier includes 3 contract reviews per month with no credit card required.


This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation.

contract review,contract red flags,contract checklist,legal risk assessment,due diligence
Stephen Ndegwa

Stephen Ndegwa

Clause Labs AI

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