A Text Can Be A Contract
I see multiple posts a day in here that could have been solved by a simple written agreement.
Not a 12 page legal document. Not something drafted by lawyer. Just clarity in writing.
A contract does not have to be complicated to hold up. In most states, a contract is simply:
• An offer
• An acceptance
• Something of value exchanged
• Clear terms
That can absolutely exist in email or even text messages.
If I text a client:
“(Said work) is 2 hours for $250. Delivery within 5 days. 20 edited images included.”
And they reply:
“Sounds good. Let’s do it.”
That is a contract.
Courts look for intent and clarity, not fancy formatting. If both parties clearly agreed to defined terms and there’s proof of that agreement, it carries weight.
The problem I keep seeing from people isn’t bad clients. It’s unclear expectations.
No price in writing.
No delivery timeline defined.
No usage rights clarified.
No cancellation terms discussed.
Then when things go sideways, there’s nothing to point to, and you get screwed.
A simple written agreement protects both sides. It protects you from nonpayment. It protects the client from surprise charges or shifting scope.
Say it with me, “Clarity isn’t distrust, it’s professionalism.”
You don’t need to lawyer up for every $300 job. But you absolutely need the terms in writing.
If you’re running a business, even part time, this is how it’s done.
- Simple Example
This can be sent as a message, email, or attached to an invoice:
“Hi [Client Name], just confirming details:
Service: 2 hours of event photography
Date: March 15, 2026
Rate: $250 total
Payment: Due on or before event day
Deliverables: Minimum 20 edited high resolution images
Delivery: Within 5 business days
Usage: Client may use images for social media and marketing. Photographer retains copyright.
Cancellation: If canceled within 48 hours of the event, 50 percent fee is due.
Please reply ‘I agree’ so we’re both on the same page.”
That’s it.
Is it perfect? No.
Is it enforceable? Yes, far more than nothing.
Will it prevent 80 percent of the drama posted here? Absolutely.
Just 2-cents from some middle aged, 50 y/o Gen Xer, doing their best to run a business.
Take it for what it’s worth.
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