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For Independent InstallersBusiness6/10/20267 min read

The One-Page Agreement Every Freelance Wrap Installer Needs (Scope, Pay, Escrow)

Freelance installers get burned on handshakes, not on skills. The exact terms to put in writing before every job — scope, rate, materials, damage, payment timing — and how escrow removes the scariest risk.

The One-Page Agreement Every Freelance Wrap Installer Needs (Scope, Pay, Escrow)
Table of Contents

Ask ten freelance installers about their worst month and nine stories start the same way: "we agreed verbally." Not on the work — on the money, the scope, or whose fault the paint chip was. You don't need a lawyer or a 12-page contract. You need one page, sent before every job, covering the six things people actually fight about.

The Six Clauses That Matter

1. Scope — what "done" means

"Full wrap install on one 2022 Transit MR, shop-supplied printed and laminated film, install only, jambs excluded, debris removal included." Specific enough that neither side can imagine something different. The extra tailgate the customer adds mid-job is a new line at a stated rate, agreed in writing before you wrap it.

2. Rate and structure

The number AND the unit — day rate with what counts as a day (8 hours bay time), per-sq-ft with how footage is measured, hourly with a minimum. Plus travel beyond your radius, and your rush premium. (What the numbers should be.)

3. Materials and failures

Whose film, who pays when a panel fails. The standard that's fair to both sides: shop supplies material; the first ruined panel from installer error is on you (your reprint cost), material defects and bad prints are on them. Cap your exposure: "installer liability limited to reprint cost of affected panels."

4. Pre-existing damage

Photo walk-around before you touch the vehicle, timestamped, shared to the thread. Thirty seconds of photos has ended more disputes than every contract clause ever written. Note paint condition explicitly — old respray, rock chips, rust bubbles — because vinyl removal will find them later and someone will ask.

5. Payment timing

When the money moves and how. For new clients: escrow, full stop. On Wraptor, the shop funds the job through Stripe before you start, the money sits held, and it releases when they approve — or auto-releases in 7 days if they go quiet. The platform fee rides on top, so your quote is your payout. For established clients: invoice day-of, due net-7, and the iron rule — a shop that owes for two jobs doesn't get a third.

6. The walkaway

What happens if either side cancels: deposit/escrow handling, a kill fee for same-week cancellations (a half-day rate is standard), and who owns scheduling conflicts.

Why the Thread Beats the PDF

A signed PDF nobody reads loses to a message thread both sides wrote. When the agreement lives in the same conversation as the hire request — like Wraptor's built-in hire-request messaging — the scope, the number, the photos, and the "yes, agreed" are one scroll away when memories differ. That's evidence AND convenience. Send your one-pager as a message, get "agreed" back, done.

The Disputes You'll Actually Have

  • "It's not done." Defined scope + your completion photos answer it. On escrowed jobs, mark complete with photos attached; if the shop disputes, a neutral admin reviews — you're not negotiating against someone holding your money.
  • "There's damage." Your pre-job walk-around photos answer it.
  • "We'll pay you next month." Escrow answers it before it's asked — the money existed before you started.

Notice the pattern: every dispute is won or lost before the job starts. The one-pager isn't paperwork; it's the 10 minutes that protects the $600 day.

The agreement, the thread, and the money in one place: Wraptor's installer network gives every hire request built-in messaging and escrow-protected payments — scope in writing, funds held up front, auto-release in 7 days, disputes refereed. Get listed →

Wraptor Editorial

Sal Lara

Founder, Wraptor

Sal runs a vehicle wrap and tint studio and built Wraptor to handle the operations work he was sick of doing in spreadsheets. Writes about pricing, materials, and shop ops from inside the trade.

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