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Manufacturing agreement renewal reminders

Extract supply-term renewals, auto-renewal notice deadlines, forecast and MOQ reset dates, price-review windows, and tooling or end-of-life notice dates.

PDF or DOCX, up to 25 MB. One free extraction per day. No signup needed.

Never miss a supply-term renewal again

Contracko automatically identifies the deadlines and obligations in your contract and sets reminders for you.

Renewal dates

Auto-renewal triggers and the next term start.

Notice deadlines

The last safe day to act before a clause locks in.

Expiration dates

When the current term ends, with renewal context.

Obligations

Reports, certificates, approvals, and recurring tasks.

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Deleted after analysis

Reminder guidance for this contract type

A manufacturing agreement renews more than a price

When a supply agreement auto-renews, it does not just extend a unit cost β€” it re-commits an entire operating relationship. The same renewal carries the minimum order quantities you have to keep buying, the forecast accuracy you are held to, the price-review mechanism that adjusts cost over the term, and the exclusivity or single-source terms that constrain where else you can buy. By renewal time, the volumes, the cost base, and the alternatives in the market have usually all moved, but the contract has not. If the auto-renewal notice window passes unnoticed, every one of those terms locks in for another full term on yesterday’s assumptions. The renewal notice is therefore the single most valuable date in the agreement: it is the only moment the whole commercial package is reopened. Tracking it as a hard, dated reminder β€” with enough lead time to actually renegotiate β€” is what keeps a supply deal current instead of inherited.

Forecasts, MOQs, and tooling are dated commitments hiding in plain sight

Beyond the headline renewal, a manufacturing agreement runs on a set of recurring obligations that each have their own clock. Rolling forecasts have to be submitted on a cadence, and missing one can shift liability for unsold inventory. Minimum order quantities recommit volume every period, regardless of actual demand. Price-review or indexation clauses adjust the unit cost at fixed intervals, sometimes automatically. And on the back end, tooling ownership and end-of-life or last-time-buy notices govern what happens when a part is discontinued β€” a notice period that, if missed, can leave a production line without a final order placed. None of these are renewal dates, but all of them are deadlines with cost attached, and they are easy to lose between the contract signing and the next renewal. Tracking the forecast cycle, MOQ resets, price reviews, and EOL notices as separate dated reminders keeps the day-to-day of the supply relationship from drifting out of sync with the contract that governs it.

Quick answers

Short answers to the questions we get most about reminder extraction.

Other reminder pages

Each page is tuned to a different contract type or reminder job.

Keep every supply-term commitment on schedule

Track auto-renewal notice, forecast and MOQ resets, price reviews, and end-of-life notices from one record.

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