Termination Clause in Contract: How to Get Them Right

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  • Termination clauses define how and when contracts can be exited.
    They establish clear pathways for ending agreements while managing legal and financial risk.  
  • Different termination types serve different business needs.
    Termination for cause addresses breaches, while termination for convenience provides flexibility without proving fault. 
  • Clarity in notice, obligations, and timelines is critical.
    Well-defined procedures, cure periods, and post-termination responsibilities reduce disputes and ensure smooth exits. 
  • Poorly drafted clauses can create significant risk and imbalance.
    Vague breach definitions, one-sided rights, or missing transition terms often lead to legal and operational issues. 
  • Termination requirements vary by contract type.
    SaaS, services, and supply agreements each require tailored provisions for data, assets, and continuity. 
  • CLM platforms enable proactive termination management.
    They improve visibility, automate alerts, and ensure compliance across termination rights and obligations. 

While termination for convenience provides flexibility, it’s typically subject to contractual limitations such as minimum commitment periods, notice requirements, and termination fees. Courts may also impose implied limitations of good faith, particularly if one party has made significant investments based on the contract’s expected duration.

Material breach definitions should be specific enough to provide clarity but not so narrow that they exclude unanticipated serious violations. Best practice is to list examples of material breaches while including a broader definition encompassing failures that substantially deprive a party of the agreement’s expected benefits.

Courts generally enforce reasonable termination fees that approximate the non-terminating party’s actual damages or investments. However, excessive fees may be deemed unenforceable penalties. Structure fees to reflect unamortized costs or reasonable compensation for lost business rather than punitive amounts.

Automatic renewal provisions (“evergreen clauses”) can complicate termination rights if not carefully drafted. Always specify the window during which termination notice must be given to prevent renewal (e.g., “either party may terminate by providing written notice at least 60 days before the end of the current term”). Failure to provide notice within this window typically results in renewal for the specified period.

Common surviving obligations include confidentiality (often indefinite or for a specified period), indemnification for claims arising during the contract term, limitation of liability, non-solicitation/non-compete provisions, and warranty obligations. Always explicitly list which provisions survive in your termination clause.

About the author
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Sirion

Sirion is the world’s leading AI-native CLM platform, pioneering the application of Agentic AI to help enterprises transform the way they store, create, and manage contracts. The platform’s extraction, conversational search, and AI-enhanced negotiation capabilities have revolutionized contracting across enterprise teams – from legal and procurement to sales and finance.