Financial / liability risk | Contract risk guide
Limitation of Remedies Clause Risk: When Your Only Fix Is Too Small
This guide explains limitation of remedies clause risk in plain English so you can spot red flags fast - even if you're not a lawyer. Use it to scan your contract, find the wording, and know what to negotiate.
Direct answer
limitation of remedies clause risk is a contract topic that defines who pays for losses and how big the damages can be. make you responsible for costs you didn't price in This can change the real cost of the deal and how much leverage you have when negotiating.
Quote
"The secret of getting ahead is getting started."
- Mark Twain (attributed)
Quote
"Well done is better than well said."
- Benjamin Franklin
Related stats (business contracts)
Sources: Docusign / Deloitte signals reported by TechRadar and Axios. Treat these as directional business benchmarks, not legal advice.
Why it's risky (specific outcomes)
- You may owe damages far above the contract price if liability is uncapped.
- You could be responsible for lost profits, indirect, or consequential damages.
- Broad indemnity language can make you pay for third-party claims you didn't cause.
- Insurance may not cover the full exposure if the clause is too broad.
- Liability and indemnity obligations often survive termination.
Risk detection board
Red flags to look for
Search for these patterns first. They usually signal hidden cost, one-sided leverage, or a clause that needs a tighter limit before signing.
Liability is "uncapped" or "without limitation".
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
Consequential or indirect damages are included, including lost profits or downtime.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
Indemnity uses "any and all losses" and covers the other party negligence.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
The cap excludes key claim types, so it does not really protect you.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
You must defend at your own cost, not just reimburse later.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
Warranty disclaimers remove remedies while liability remains broad.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
The contract mentions "limitation of remedies clause risk" but does not say who decides or what evidence is required.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
Key details are moved into attachments, such as pricing, scope, or timelines, instead of the main terms.
Ask for a limit, a definition, and a written notice/dispute window.
Scenario replay
Real example: what you can lose
A practical mini-story makes the risk easier to judge than abstract legal wording.
Potential impact
they settled for $7,500 and spent weeks on dispute cleanupThis is the kind of loss BrieflyGo tries to surface before the document moves to signing.
Who
A contractor
Signed
a project agreement with broad indemnity and consequential damages included
Trigger
a delay triggered a claim for "lost profits" well beyond the project fee
Manual scan mode
How to identify it
Use this as a quick search workflow before uploading the contract or asking the other side for changes.
Where to look
Limitation of liability,Damages,Indemnification,Warranties,Remedies
Phrases to search
without limitationany and all lossesconsequential damagesindirect damagesdefend and indemnifyDanger pattern
- No cap (or cap excludes key claims).
- Consequential/indirect damages included.
- Indemnity covers broad events you can't control.
Redline helper
Risky wording vs safer wording
""any and all losses" without limitation"
"Each party is liable only for direct damages caused by its breach, capped at fees paid in the prior 12 months, except for fraud or intentional misconduct."
Why this helps: This narrows responsibility to caused harm, excludes open-ended damages, and adds a predictable cap.
Hi, I reviewed the limitation of remedies clause risk language and want to tighten it before signing.
The current wording feels broader than needed because it could shift risk, cost, or control beyond the intended deal.
Could we replace it with this narrower version: "Each party is liable only for direct damages caused by its breach, capped at fees paid in the prior 12 months, except for fraud or intentional misconduct."
This keeps the agreement workable for both sides while still protecting the legitimate business concern.
Action board
How to protect yourself
Treat these as practical redline moves: narrow the language, add measurable limits, then re-check the edited document before you sign.
Add a clear liability cap (e.g., fees paid in the last 12 months).
Ask for this change in writing, then verify the final PDF matches the negotiated wording.
Exclude consequential/indirect damages explicitly (lost profits, downtime).
Ask for this change in writing, then verify the final PDF matches the negotiated wording.
Broad indemnity language can make you pay for third-party claims you didn't cause.
Ask for this change in writing, then verify the final PDF matches the negotiated wording.
Negotiate: ask for a narrower scope and clear definitions.
Ask for this change in writing, then verify the final PDF matches the negotiated wording.
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FAQ
Is this type of clause legal?
Often yes - but legality depends on your location, the exact wording, and the context. Even a legal clause can still be a bad deal for you.
Can it be changed in the draft?
Yes, many clauses can be removed or narrowed. If the other side won't remove it, ask for limits, exceptions, or a trade-off (price, term, scope).
Who benefits from it?
Usually the party with more power in the negotiation. The clause often shifts risk away from them and onto you, especially when it's broad or one-sided.
When does it become dangerous?
When it's broad, has no clear limits, applies after termination, or is tied to large money. It's also risky when the contract has vague definitions or hidden cross-references.