Who Actually Owns the Work You Create — and How to Keep What Should Be Yours
According to the U.S. Copyright Office, independent contractors automatically hold copyright in their original work unless a written agreement transfers those rights. That means the IP ownership clause in your contract is the document that legally moves ownership from you to your client — or doesn't.
A 2023 survey by the Graphic Artists Guild found that 67% of freelance designers had signed at least one contract with IP terms they didn't fully understand at the time of signing. In many cases, overbroad IP clauses stripped them of rights to their own pre-existing tools and design systems — not just the deliverable the client commissioned.
| Work-for-Hire | IP Assignment | |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Client is deemed original author under copyright law | Creator transfers rights they initially hold |
| Reversal | Irrevocable in the U.S. | May include reversion rights if negotiated |
| Moral rights | No creator rights recognized | Creator may retain attribution rights in some countries |
| Scope risk | Limited to specifically designated categories | Often written broadly ("all work product") |
For freelancers, the practical effect is nearly identical — both clauses give the client full ownership. The risk lies in scope: how broadly does the contract define "work product" and "intellectual property"?
| IP Loss Scenario | Exposure Range |
|---|---|
| Style / voice / approach cloned by client | $5,000–$25,000 |
| Brand identity transferred, used by client's competitors | $10,000–$60,000 |
| Code / software transferred without background IP carve-out | $25,000–$150,000+ |
"I'd like to retain a non-exclusive, royalty-free license to display the deliverables in my portfolio and present them to prospective clients for the purpose of showcasing my work. Client may exclude specific deliverables by written request if confidentiality is required."
"This assignment excludes any pre-existing intellectual property, tools, templates, libraries, or processes owned by Contractor prior to this Agreement. Contractor grants Client a non-exclusive license to use such pre-existing IP solely as incorporated in the deliverables."
If your deliverable involves AI-assisted work, see Who Owns AI-Assisted Work in a Freelance Contract — SCOTUS declined to hear the Thaler appeal in March 2026, confirming AI-generated work without significant human authorship cannot be copyrighted. Your client cannot own what copyright law doesn't recognize as protectable.
It defines who holds copyright and other intellectual property rights in work created under the contract. For freelancers, it determines whether you retain, license, or permanently transfer rights to your deliverables.
Work-for-hire makes the client the original author by law — irrevocable in the U.S. IP assignment is a contractual transfer of rights you initially hold. Both effectively give the client ownership, but scope language and retained rights vary significantly.
Yes — under U.S. copyright law, you hold the copyright in original work you create, including work for clients, unless a written agreement transfers it. Without a contract, the client gets an implied license for the specific intended use, but you retain the underlying copyright.
Yes, and you should. A portfolio license — the right to display work in your portfolio and present it to prospective clients — costs the client nothing and is standard practice in creative fields. Get it in writing before signing.
It may capture pre-existing tools, templates, and background IP you own before the project starts. Courts have enforced these clauses literally. Negotiate explicit carve-outs for pre-existing IP and tools before signing.
See exactly what your IP clause says — and whether your pre-existing tools are at risk.
Run your contract through NovaDocs →Related: Work for Hire Clause Explained | Who Owns AI Output in a Freelance Contract | Your Client Wants to Use Your Work to Train Their AI: How to Spot It and Stop It | Confidentiality Clause
Last updated: May 18, 2026