Term (duration)
The period during which a contract is in force, from start date to expiry.
Definição
The term of a contract is its duration: when obligations begin and when the agreement ends, whether on a fixed date, after a set period, or on completion of the work. It often interacts with renewal and notice provisions that determine whether the contract continues automatically. A clear term avoids disputes about when performance and payment obligations start and stop.
Exemplo
A maintenance contract runs for an initial term of two years and then renews annually unless either party gives notice.
Porque é um risco para a empresa
Contracts that roll over automatically without active review lock businesses into commitments that no longer reflect market rates or operational needs. A portfolio of multi-year agreements with staggered end dates is easy to lose track of, and missing a notice window by even one day can mean another full year of obligations.
Como gerir
- Log every contract end date and associated notice deadline when a contract is signed, not when it is about to expire.
- Set renewal review reminders well in advance (typically 90 days before the notice deadline) so you have time to evaluate and renegotiate.
- Clarify in the contract whether the term restarts from the original start date or from the last renewal date to avoid calendar disputes.
Perguntas frequentes
Questões comuns sobre este termo.