Price Indexation Clause
Adjusts contract prices over time against an objective index such as inflation, protecting margins in long deals.
Qué es
A price indexation (or escalation) clause links agreed prices to a published index, typically a consumer or producer price index, so they rise (or fall) at set intervals. It removes the need to renegotiate every year in multi-year contracts.
Por qué importa
In long-term supply or service contracts, fixed prices erode margins when input costs rise. Indexation keeps pricing fair to both sides and predictable, reducing the risk of disputes or unilateral price hikes.
Cómo aplicarla
- Name a specific, published index (e.g. CBS CPI) and the exact reference month.
- State the adjustment frequency and a clear formula for calculating the new price.
- Decide whether indexation is automatic or requires written notice.
- Add a fallback if the chosen index is discontinued or replaced.
Consejos de negociación
- • Buyers can cap annual increases or split the index movement between the parties.
- • Sellers should ensure the clause permits upward, not just downward, adjustment.
Errores frecuentes
- • Referencing an index that is later renamed or discontinued with no fallback.
- • In consumer contracts, an opaque escalation clause may be unreasonably onerous.
Referencias legales
- BW 6:248 Reasonableness and fairness Derecho neerlandés
- BW 6:233 Unreasonably onerous standard terms Derecho neerlandés
Salvo indicación en contrario, las referencias remiten al derecho neerlandés (Burgerlijk Wetboek, el Código Civil neerlandés); los instrumentos de la UE como el RGPD se aplican en toda la UE. Se trata de información general, no de asesoramiento legal. Otras jurisdicciones tratan estos conceptos de forma distinta. Verifique el texto vigente y su situación con un abogado cualificado.
Preguntas frecuentes
Preguntas comunes sobre esta cláusula.