What Is a Limitation of Liability Clause?
A limitation of liability clause restricts the maximum amount either party can recover if the other breaches the contract or causes harm. The cap is typically set as a dollar figure or tied to total fees paid under the contract. Courts have consistently enforced liability caps in commercial contracts between sophisticated parties, with narrow exceptions for gross negligence, intentional misconduct, and fraud. According to the World Commerce & Contracting organization, limitation of liability provisions are present in over 90% of commercial service agreements — yet most freelancers sign them without reading the cap amount or checking whether it's mutual.
Definition
The limitation of liability clause is the clause that determines your worst-case financial exposure from a contract. If your client can prove you caused them $500,000 in downstream damages — a missed deadline that cost them a product launch, a data error that created compliance liability — the liability cap is the number that actually matters. Without a cap, you are potentially exposed for the full extent of consequential damages.
Most limitation of liability clauses work in two layers. First, they set a dollar cap on direct damages (typically fees paid under the contract). Second, they exclude certain categories of damages entirely — "in no event shall either party be liable for consequential, indirect, incidental, or punitive damages." These two provisions together can make the difference between a contract dispute that costs you a project fee and one that threatens your entire business.
The problem for freelancers is that many client-drafted contracts include these protections asymmetrically. The client's damages are capped; the freelancer's are not. Or the cap is set at a number (say, $500) far below the actual fees paid, which makes the protection nearly worthless while still appearing in the contract as if it's balanced.
Key Elements of a Limitation of Liability Clause
- The cap amount: Usually expressed as a dollar figure, a multiple of fees paid, or the total fees paid under the contract. Lower is better for the protected party; higher is better for the party that might be harmed.
- Mutual vs. one-sided: The clause may protect both parties equally or only one. One-sided caps are a red flag in service agreements.
- Damage exclusions: Most clauses specifically exclude consequential, indirect, incidental, punitive, and special damages. This is distinct from the cap amount — these damage categories are eliminated entirely, not just limited.
- Carve-outs: Most negotiated contracts include carve-outs that lift the cap for specific categories: IP infringement, confidentiality breaches, payment obligations, gross negligence, and intentional misconduct.
- Essential purpose acknowledgment: Many liability cap clauses include language acknowledging that the cap is an essential element of the bargain and would have caused a price change if removed — this boosts enforceability.
Red Flags to Watch For
Contract lawyers consistently identify limitation of liability clauses as among the highest-risk provisions to sign without review, because the financial stakes only become visible after a dispute arises.
- 🚩 One-sided cap: The clause limits the client's liability to you but places no corresponding cap on your liability to them. Push for mutuality.
- 🚩 Cap set below actual fees: A cap of $500 or $1,000 on a $20,000 contract is nearly meaningless protection for you while still appearing as a "balanced" provision.
- 🚩 No carve-out for payment obligations: If your fees owed are subject to the same liability cap, the client could argue they owe you nothing beyond the cap even if they simply refuse to pay.
- 🚩 No gross negligence or intentional misconduct carve-out: A clause that caps liability even for intentional harm is generally unenforceable in most states — but it shouldn't be in the contract at all.
- 🚩 Uncapped indemnification elsewhere in the same contract: Limitations of liability and indemnification clauses interact. An uncapped indemnification obligation eliminates the protection the liability cap appears to offer.
NovaDocs flags all of these automatically when you upload your contract. Analyze your contract free →
Sample Limitation of Liability Clause Language
"LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. In no event shall either party be liable to the other for any indirect, incidental, consequential, special, or punitive damages, regardless of the cause or theory of liability. Each party's total cumulative liability arising out of or related to this Agreement shall not exceed the total fees paid or payable by Client to Service Provider in the three (3) months preceding the event giving rise to the claim. The foregoing limitations shall not apply to: (i) either party's indemnification obligations under Section [X]; (ii) either party's payment obligations; (iii) damages arising from gross negligence or willful misconduct; or (iv) either party's confidentiality obligations."
Note: This sample is for educational purposes only. Always have a qualified attorney review contracts before signing.
By the Numbers
- According to the World Commerce & Contracting organization, limitation of liability provisions are present in over 90% of commercial service agreements — making them one of the most universally included contract provisions in business-to-business contracts.
- A 2023 survey by the Freelancers Union found that 61% of freelancers who had experienced a contract dispute reported that the limitation of liability clause either didn't exist or wasn't mutual in the contract they signed — contributing to significant financial losses in disputed projects.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is a limitation of liability clause?
- A limitation of liability clause restricts the maximum amount one or both parties can recover if the other breaches the contract or causes harm. The cap is typically set as a dollar figure or tied to total fees paid. Courts enforce these caps in commercial contracts, with narrow exceptions for gross negligence, intentional misconduct, and fraud.
- What is a reasonable limitation of liability cap?
- Contract lawyers generally consider a mutual cap equal to the total fees paid or payable under the contract to be a reasonable starting point for service agreements. Caps below this amount — especially asymmetric caps that protect only the client — are red flags worth negotiating. Enterprise clients sometimes push for 2–3× total contract value to account for downstream exposure.
- Does a limitation of liability clause protect against negligence?
- Generally yes for ordinary negligence in commercial contracts. However, courts in most jurisdictions will not enforce a liability cap covering gross negligence, intentional misconduct, or willful fraud. The specific carve-outs in your clause — and your state's law — determine what remains uncapped.
- Can you negotiate a limitation of liability clause?
- Yes. Liability caps are frequently negotiated in service and consulting agreements. Common negotiating positions include: raising a low cap to equal total contract value, making a one-sided cap mutual, carving out IP infringement and data breach from the cap, and excluding intentional misconduct from coverage.
- What is the difference between a limitation of liability clause and an indemnification clause?
- A limitation of liability clause caps the total damages recoverable. An indemnification clause shifts the obligation to pay for specific harm from one party to the other. Both appear in most commercial contracts and interact — an uncapped indemnification obligation can functionally eliminate the protection a liability cap appears to offer.
See This Clause in Your Contract
Upload your contract to NovaDocs and find out if your liability cap is mutual, reasonable, and actually protecting you.
Run your contract through NovaDocs →
Last updated: May 20, 2026