- Nov 10, 2025
- 15 min read
- Arpita Chakravorty
You order a coffee at a café, pay, and enjoy your drink — no signature, no written terms, and hardly any conversation. Yet a contract still exists. This simple everyday scenario reflects the key legal distinction between express and implied contracts. Understanding how these two forms of agreement operate helps bring clarity to countless personal and business transactions, whether in real estate, healthcare, hospitality, or IT services.
Contracts are foundational to nearly every industry and activity where parties exchange promises or services. Yet, contracts are not always explicitly spelled out in writing or spoken words. Often, contracts arise from behavior, circumstances, or legal principles. Understanding the nature of implied and express contracts equips you to recognize when agreements exist, how they form, and their enforceability, which helps prevent misunderstandings and protects your rights.
This guide breaks down these contract types in clear language, supporting your grasp of how contracts work in practice across hospitality, real estate, healthcare, IT, and more. We’ll also explore how the law treats implied forms of agreement, what goes into making them enforceable, and offer practical tools to help you identify or apply contract concepts in real-world scenarios.
What Are Express and Implied Contracts? Clear Definitions to Get You Started
At the core, a contract is an agreement between two or more parties that creates enforceable obligations. But not all contracts look the same.
Express Contracts: The Clear Promise
An express contract forms when parties explicitly state their agreement, whether orally or in writing. The terms are clearly communicated and agreed upon before performance begins. For example:
- Signing a lease agreement for an apartment.
- A written service contract between a software company and a client.
- Ordering a meal and confirming the price before receiving it.
Express contracts rely on mutual assent shown through words. This clarity often makes them easier to enforce because the parties’ intentions are clearly documented.
You can learn more about Express Contracts, their examples, and how they function for deeper insight.
Implied Contracts: When Actions Speak Louder Than Words
An implied contract arises from the parties’ conduct, behavior, or the circumstances rather than explicit words. Sometimes the law even imposes obligations to prevent unfairness, even when there wasn’t an intentional agreement. There are two main types:
- Implied-in-Fact Contracts: These occur when the conduct of the parties shows mutual agreement. For example, going to a doctor’s appointment typically creates an implied understanding that you will pay for the medical services, even if no contract was signed.
- Implied-in-Law Contracts (Quasi-Contracts): These are legal constructs imposed by courts to prevent unjust enrichment. They do not depend on the parties’ consent but ensure fairness. For instance, if an emergency worker treats someone who is unconscious, the law implies a contract for payment even though the patient didn’t explicitly agree.
Understanding these distinctions is essential when you consider enforceability or remedies under the law.
How Implied and Express Contracts Form: Recognizing the Building Blocks
All enforceable contracts—whether express or implied—typically share three main elements:
- Offer: One party proposes terms.
- Acceptance: The other party agrees to those terms, either explicitly or implied through action.
- Consideration: Something of value is exchanged (e.g., services, money, goods).
With express contracts, these elements are openly communicated. But with implied contracts, the offer and acceptance are inferred from behavior or circumstances.
How can you tell if conduct shows a real contract?
- Did one party provide a service or deliver goods expecting payment?
- Did the other party accept or knowingly benefit without objection?
- Was there a reasonable assumption that payment or some performance was expected?
For example, in hospitality, when a guest orders room service and accepts the meal, the hotel expects payment under an implied contract. In IT services, an ongoing support arrangement without a signed contract might still impose obligations based on past behavior and invoicing.
Courts evaluate these factors carefully and also consider whether any unjust enrichment occurred—to make sure no party benefits unfairly without compensating the other.
For detailed help understanding enforceability, see the Enforceable Contract Guide.
Everyday Examples Across Industries: Seeing Implied and Express Contracts in Action
Contracts, implied or express, show up everywhere, and understanding them helps you navigate and manage business and personal relationships successfully.
In Hospitality
- Express: A signed contract for event planning at a hotel.
- Implied: Ordering and paying for meals or services without a written agreement.
In Real Estate
- Express: Lease agreements formally signed.
- Implied: Arrangements where tenants pay rent after moving in without a signed lease, recognized by conduct and acceptance.
In Healthcare
- Express: Consent forms for surgeries.
- Implied: Emergency treatment where the patient cannot consent but care is provided with expected payment.
In IT and Professional Services
- Express: Service-level agreements (SLAs) signed before projects.
- Implied: Ongoing support or upgrades where previous behavior shows acceptance and payment practices.
In Construction
- Express: Written contracts for project delivery.
- Implied: Industry-standard obligations inferred from prior dealings or standard practices.
These examples reflect how contracts operate universally, emphasizing the need to understand both the explicit agreements and the obligations that arise from conduct.
For a broader view of Types of Legal Contracts across sectors, you can explore available resources.
What Makes Implied Contracts Legally Binding? Enforceability and Remedies
A common misconception is that implied contracts are “less real” or “non-binding.” In fact, courts treat implied contracts seriously when the necessary elements exist, and there’s evidence of mutual assent through action.
Factors Courts Consider for Implied Contracts
- Whether the parties behaved as if they had a contract.
- Whether one party received a benefit and the other party expected compensation.
- Whether refusal to enforce would cause unjust enrichment.
Remedies and Enforcement
When an implied contract is found, remedies can include:
- Payment for services rendered.
- Specific performance where appropriate.
- Damages to compensate losses.
With quasi-contracts (implied-in-law), remedies focus on preventing unjust enrichment, rather than enforcing any actual agreement.
Knowing these principles helps businesses and individuals protect themselves and assert rights when formal contracts may be absent.
How to Decide if an Agreement Is Express or Implied: A Simple Framework
Deciding the contract type is key for enforcement and risk management. Consider these steps:
- Step 1: Look for Explicit Terms. Is there a written or spoken agreement? If yes, it’s an express contract.
- Step 2: Analyze Parties’ Behavior. Did actions or circumstances clearly show acceptance and expectation of exchange? If yes, consider an implied-in-fact contract.
- Step 3: Assess if Law Should Intervene. In cases lacking agreement but where one party benefits unfairly, the law may impose an implied-in-law contract.
Common Pitfalls and Misunderstandings to Avoid
- Assuming no paper equals no contract: Many contracts form through conduct and are enforceable.
- Confusing implied-in-fact with implied-in-law: The first depends on parties’ conduct; the second is imposed by law.
- Believing implied contracts require no consideration: They still require the exchange of value.
- Expecting the same evidentiary standards across jurisdictions: Contract laws may vary, but core principles are consistent.
Avoiding these mistakes helps in contract planning and dispute resolution.
Conclusion: Why Understanding Implied vs. Express Contracts Matters
Express and implied contracts may form in different ways, but both carry real obligations and real consequences. Whether terms are spelled out or understood through conduct, the law expects parties to honor the exchange of value and act in good faith. With clearer awareness of how these contracts arise — from routine business services to high-stakes commercial agreements — you are better equipped to protect your interests, spot contractual relationships as they form, and reduce the risk of disputes later.
As you work across industries or manage agreements at scale, recognizing when a contract exists (even without paperwork) becomes a key business skill. Reviewing past dealings, documenting expectations early, and setting consistent processes for approvals and communication can strengthen both express and implied contractual relationships.
If you want to go deeper into related concepts like enforceability, clauses, and drafting best practices, explore our guide on enforceable contracts and essential contract terms — and build confidence in every agreement, whether written, spoken, or formed by actions.
Frequently Asked Questions About Implied vs Express Contracts
Can an implied contract be written down later to become express?
Yes, parties can formalize an implied contract by subsequently agreeing on terms in writing or verbally, turning it into an express contract.
Are all implied contracts legally enforceable?
Not all implied arrangements are enforceable. There must be clear evidence of mutual assent, offer, acceptance, and consideration for courts to uphold an implied contract.
How do implied contracts relate to verbal contracts?
Verbal (oral) contracts are express contracts made through spoken words. Implied contracts arise from actions rather than explicit statements.
When does an implied-in-law contract apply?
Implied-in-law contracts apply to prevent one party’s unjust enrichment where no real agreement exists, such as emergency services given without consent.
How are industries like healthcare or construction affected by implied contracts?
Sectors with complex or urgent services often rely on implied contracts for care or standards, especially when explicit agreements are impractical or missing.
What role does consideration play in implied contracts?
Consideration—something of value exchanged—is still necessary in implied contracts, demonstrated by the benefit conferred and expected compensation.
How do I handle contract disputes involving implied contracts?
Collect evidence of conduct, benefits exchanged, and communications to show mutual understanding. Legal advice can clarify enforceability based on jurisdiction-specific law.
Additional Resources
Understanding the Different Types of Legal Contracts: A Beginner’s Overview