Subcontractor Agreement Template (UK)

(England & Wales)

Create your construction subcontractor agreement with scope of works, CIS deductions, payment terms, retention, variations, insurance, indemnity, and termination provisions.

Professionally drafted — structured following the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, Finance Act 2004 (CIS), and CDM Regulations 2015 for England and Wales.

Download a professionally drafted subcontractor agreement template for the UK construction industry, also known as a sub-contract, construction subcontract, contractor to subcontractor agreement, labour-only subcontract, or trades subcontract. Covers scope of works and schedule of works, Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) verification and tax deductions under the Finance Act 2004, payment terms following the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (including payment notices, pay less notices, and the right to suspend for non-payment), IR35 and off-payroll working rules, substitution rights, retention and defects liability period, variations procedure, health and safety under CDM Regulations 2015, public liability and employers' liability insurance, indemnity, confidentiality, intellectual property, non-solicitation, termination for convenience and for cause, dispute resolution, and adjudication under the Scheme for Construction Contracts. Suitable for main contractors engaging plumbers, electricians, bricklayers, roofers, groundworkers, scaffolders, landscapers, HVAC engineers, and other self-employed trades. Structured following UK construction law for England and Wales.

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Who Is This Subcontractor Agreement For?

For main contractors engaging self-employed trades on construction projects — from single-trade labour to complex design-and-build packages.

A UK construction subcontractor agreement — also called a sub-contract, labour-only subcontract, or trades subcontract — is a recognised contract between a main contractor and a self-employed subcontractor. It sets out scope, payment, CIS deductions, insurance, and indemnity, and is structured following the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and the Finance Act 2004.▼ Tap below to read more

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What Is a Subcontractor Agreement and How Does It Work?

A subcontractor agreement is a written contract between a main contractor (the party holding the primary contract with the client) and a subcontractor (a self-employed trades-person or subcontracting business) to carry out a defined part of the works. Under UK construction law it is the document that evidences the commercial relationship, self-employment status, and allocation of risk.

Key Features:

  • Scope of works — a clear description of the works, materials, tools, and deliverables so there is no ambiguity about what is "in" and what is "out"
  • CIS deductions — verification with HMRC and deductions at the correct rate (gross, 20%, or 30%) under the Construction Industry Scheme
  • Payment terms — payment notices, pay less notices, and the right to suspend for non-payment under the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996
  • Self-employment status — clauses addressing IR35, substitution, and control to support a genuine business-to-business arrangement
  • Insurance and indemnity — minimum public liability, employers' liability, and an indemnity for losses caused by the subcontractor's negligence
  • Health and safety — CDM Regulations 2015 compliance and site rules flow-down
  • Termination — notice periods, termination for cause, and for convenience where agreed

How It Differs from an Employment Contract:

A subcontractor is a separate business engaged on commercial terms — not an employee. There is no holiday pay, sick pay, or PAYE. The subcontractor is responsible for their own tax, National Insurance, and insurance. Using the wrong document can trigger HMRC reclassification and backdated tax liabilities.

Our subcontractor agreement is professionally drafted and structured following the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, the Finance Act 2004 (CIS), and the CDM Regulations 2015.

Without a written subcontractor agreement, main contractors face HMRC reclassification of self-employed subbies as employees, disputes over scope and payment, CIS penalties, and uninsured liability for defective work — any of which can cost far more than the contract itself.▼ Tap below to read more

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Risks of Engaging Subbies Without a Written Agreement

Commercial and Tax Risks:

  • HMRC reclassification: Without a contract that demonstrates a genuine business-to-business relationship, HMRC can treat your subbies as employees — leaving you liable for backdated PAYE, National Insurance, interest, and penalties going back up to six years.
  • CIS penalties: Failure to operate CIS correctly can result in significant fines and the loss of gross payment status for the main contractor.
  • Payment disputes: Without a clear payment schedule, notices regime, and variations procedure, disputes over sums due become expensive and slow to resolve.
  • Scope creep: "Can you just quickly..." requests without a formal change procedure kill budgets. A written variations clause prevents this.
  • Uninsured liability: If a subbie injures a third party, damages the site, or produces defective work and has no public liability insurance, the main contractor is usually on the hook.
  • Unfair dismissal claims: If work dries up and you end the arrangement, a subbie with no written contract can try to claim employee status and bring an unfair dismissal claim in the Employment Tribunal.
  • IR35 exposure: For limited-company subbies, poor contract wording can leave the engagement "inside IR35" — exposing the fee-payer to tax, NI, and penalties.
  • Adjudication surprises: Under the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996, construction disputes can be referred to adjudication at short notice — the contract terms drive the outcome.

The £15 Question:

A written subcontractor agreement is the cheapest piece of risk management a main contractor can buy. A single CIS penalty, tribunal claim, or payment dispute typically costs thousands — many times the price of getting the paperwork right up front.

A £15 investment in a properly drafted subcontractor agreement is small compared with the cost of any single dispute.

Our subcontractor agreement covers scope of works, CIS verification and deductions, Construction Act 1996 payment notices, retention, variations, CDM 2015 health and safety, IR35 and substitution, insurance minimums, indemnity, confidentiality, termination, and dispute resolution — all in one professionally drafted document for England and Wales.▼ Tap below to read more

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What's Included in Our Subcontractor Agreement

Comprehensive Construction Subcontract Package:

  • ✓ Parties, recitals, and reference to the main contract
  • ✓ Scope of works, schedule of works, and site details
  • ✓ Start date, duration, and completion date
  • ✓ Price, fee structure (fixed, day rate, or measured), and invoicing
  • ✓ Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) — verification, deduction rates, and monthly returns
  • ✓ Payment terms following the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996
  • ✓ Payment notices, pay less notices, and right to suspend performance
  • ✓ Retention (where used) and release on practical completion
  • ✓ Defects liability period and remedial work procedure
  • ✓ Variations procedure — written instructions and agreed pricing
  • ✓ Self-employment status, IR35 considerations, and right of substitution
  • ✓ Public liability and employers' liability insurance minimums
  • ✓ Indemnity for losses arising from the subcontractor's negligence
  • ✓ CDM Regulations 2015 and health and safety flow-down
  • ✓ Materials, tools, PPE, and site rules
  • ✓ Confidentiality and data protection (UK GDPR)
  • ✓ Intellectual property assignment for design-related work
  • ✓ Non-solicitation of staff and clients
  • ✓ Termination for convenience and for cause
  • ✓ Dispute resolution and adjudication under the Scheme for Construction Contracts
  • ✓ Governing law: England and Wales
  • ✓ Clear signing blocks for both parties

The agreement is drafted to meet the formal requirements of the Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 and the Finance Act 2004.

Related documents: Main contractors also often use an Employment Contract for direct staff, NDA for confidential projects, and Consultancy Agreement for non-construction professional services.

Common mistakes include using generic US templates, missing CIS wording, vague scope, no variations procedure, no Construction Act payment notices, and treating the agreement as a formality — each of which can turn into an HMRC investigation or an adjudication at the worst possible moment.▼ Tap below to read more

Common Subcontractor Agreement Mistakes to Avoid

Don't Make These Critical Errors:

  • Using a US template: American templates reference "attorneys", "mechanic's liens", and state law — none of which apply in the UK. Always use a document drafted to UK law.
  • No CIS clause: If construction operations are in scope, CIS must be addressed. Missing CIS wording can leave the main contractor liable for under-deducted tax for up to six years.
  • Vague scope of works: "Build the extension" is not a scope. Specify drawings, specifications, materials, and acceptance criteria.
  • No variations procedure: On-site "can you just..." requests need a written instruction, agreed price, and programme impact — otherwise they become disputes.
  • Missing Construction Act notices: The Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 requires payment notices and pay less notices. Without them, the default "notified sum" rules apply and main contractors lose the right to dispute amounts.
  • Weak IR35 wording: For limited-company subbies, a weak or fettered right of substitution and heavy control clauses can push the engagement inside IR35.
  • No insurance minimums: Specify public liability (typically £2m–£5m) and employers' liability (£10m minimum, legally required if the subbie has employees).
  • Ignoring CDM 2015: Principal contractor duties, site rules, and RAMS flow-down are not optional on most commercial sites.
  • No retention or defects regime: Retention (usually 5% released on practical completion plus 5% at end of defects liability) is industry-standard and protects against snags.
  • No termination clause: Without a clear exit, both parties are stuck — and disputes about whether termination was lawful are expensive.
  • Not getting it signed: An unsigned agreement is evidence, but a signed one is binding. Get wet-ink or electronic signatures from both parties before work starts.

Our subcontractor agreement addresses each of these issues with clear, UK-specific drafting.

⚠️ Before work starts — critical:

Both parties should sign the agreement before the subcontractor begins work on site. Keep a signed copy with your project file. Verify the subcontractor with HMRC for CIS before making the first payment. Obtain and keep copies of public liability and employers' liability insurance certificates. Many customers opt for solicitor review on high-value projects.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a subcontractor agreement legally binding?

Yes. When completed and signed correctly by both the main contractor and the subcontractor, this creates a recognised contract under English law.

Our template includes professional legal structure, all required clauses for UK construction engagements, CIS provisions, Construction Act 1996 payment terms, and clear signing blocks.

Subcontractor agreements are widely used across UK construction, trades, and professional services to set out scope, payment, insurance, and liability terms. High-value or complex projects? Some main contractors opt for solicitor review before signing.

How much does a solicitor charge to draft a subcontractor agreement?

Solicitor fees for a bespoke subcontractor agreement typically range from £400 to £1,500+ depending on complexity, project value, and whether construction-specific provisions are needed.

Our template is £15 one-time. Many main contractors complete standard subcontractor engagements confidently without additional legal costs.

Consider solicitor review for high-value projects, complex risk allocation, or disputes.

Can I write my own subcontractor agreement without a solicitor?

Yes. There is no legal requirement to use a solicitor to draft a subcontractor agreement in England and Wales.

Our template guides you through every clause including scope of works, CIS deductions, payment terms following the Construction Act 1996, variations, insurance, indemnity, termination, and dispute resolution.

Many complete confidently without one. Consider solicitor review if the project is unusually high-value or involves complex risk transfer.

Does this agreement cover CIS tax deductions?

Yes. Our template includes a full Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) clause covering verification of the subcontractor with HMRC, correct deduction rates (gross, 20% standard, or 30% unverified), monthly CIS returns, and payment and deduction statements.

The subcontractor warrants their self-employment status and agrees that CIS deductions will be made in line with HMRC rules.

IR35 status is also addressed so the engagement reflects a genuine business-to-business arrangement.

What's the difference between a subcontractor agreement and an employment contract?

A subcontractor agreement is a business-to-business contract between a main contractor and a self-employed subcontractor or subcontracting company. An employment contract creates an employer-employee relationship with PAYE, holiday pay, sick pay, and statutory rights.

Using the wrong document can trigger HMRC reclassification, backdated tax, penalties, and unfair dismissal claims. If you need to hire an employee instead, see our Employment Contract template.

Do I need a solicitor?

Many main contractors complete subcontractor agreements without one.

Our template is based on UK construction and contract law and includes clear guidance for typical trade engagements.

Consider solicitor review for high-value projects, complex designed works, or where the main contract passes unusual risk down the chain.

What if UK law changes after I purchase?

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Is this really £15 one-time, or will I be charged monthly?

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Here's what we don't do: Other sites advertise "free templates" — you spend 15 minutes filling one in, then they demand your card for a "free trial" that charges £35–£42/month when you forget to cancel. Worse, many are US-based and won't hold up under UK law. (Read about the scam)

We're different: £15 upfront for the document you actually need. Build it, preview it, pay only when you're happy. Own it forever with free lifetime updates. Based on UK law. No subscription fatigue.

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