CONTRACTS / FREELANCE REVIEWED 04 NOV 2026
Vol. I, No. 1 — A second opinion in red

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Three pages of paper between you and an unfair year. The point isn't to win the contract argument — it's to know which lines are worth arguing about before you sign. — editor's note · 2026
I.§What you get
Field guide to your review

Four things in your inbox, every time.

delivered ≈ 60 s
i.
Risk rating

Every clause, scored.

FAIR · WATCH OUT · RED FLAG. Each rating comes with a one-sentence reason in plain English so you don't have to take our word for it.

ii.
Replacement language

Paste-ready redline.

The exact line you should send back. Drop it in the email or the comment thread — no rewriting required.

iii.
Counter-proposal

A draft reply.

One short note that makes your asks sound calm and reasonable, even if you're sending it at 11:48 pm.

II.§How we rate every clause
Three marks. No middle gray.

The rubric we use on every line of every contract.

Fair

Sign without flinching.

Standard, balanced, mutually reasonable. Move on.

Watch out

Read it twice.

Not abusive, but skews the client's way. Worth a quick clarification before you sign.

Red flag

Don't sign as written.

Indemnity holes, kill fees you owe, scope you can't possibly meet. Push back, or walk.

III.§What a redline looks like
From actual reviews · names redacted

Two examples we caught last week.

Red flag · indemnity

"Contractor shall indemnify and hold harmless the Client from any and all claims, costs, damages, and liabilities, including reasonable attorneys' fees, arising out of or related to the Services."

What's wrong: "any and all" with no cap and no carve-outs. One bad outcome and you owe the client's lawyers — without limit.

paste this back
"…provided that Contractor's total aggregate liability under this section shall not exceed fees paid in the prior twelve (12) months, and shall exclude indirect, consequential, or punitive damages."
Watch out · IP assignment

"All work product, deliverables, and any intellectual property created during the engagement shall be the sole and exclusive property of the Client."

What's missing: no carve-out for your background IP — your prior templates, code, and processes get assigned away too if you don't fence them off.

paste this back
"…provided that Contractor retains all rights to pre-existing materials, tools, and methodologies developed prior to or independent of this engagement, which Contractor hereby grants Client a non-exclusive license to use within the scope of the Deliverables."
See a full review — 8 clauses, marked up end to end
IV.§The mail bag
From the inbox

Freelancers who used it instead of guessing.

Spotted an indemnity clause I would've signed without thinking. It cost me nine dollars to find out it could've cost me a year.
Maya S.
Brand designer · NYC
The replacement language is what sold me. I sent the exact paragraph back, the client said "fair," done.
Owen R.
Freelance developer · Lisbon
I'd rather pay a lawyer too. But not at 9pm on a Sunday for a $4k engagement. This filled the gap.
Priya L.
Copywriter · Toronto
V.§What it costs
Pay-per-review · no subscriptions

One review, one price. Nothing on file.

Single review
$9.00
per contract · per redline
  • Full clause-by-clause analysis
  • FAIR / WATCH OUT / RED FLAG ratings
  • Paste-ready replacement language
  • Counter-proposal email draft
  • Up to 60-page PDF, 10 MB
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VI.§Questions, answered
Frequently asked

Five questions we get most.

How does AI contract review work?
Upload your contract as a PDF. RedlineBot's AI analyzes every clause, rates each one as FAIR, WATCH OUT, or RED FLAG, and provides specific alternative language you can send to your client. The entire process takes about 60 seconds.
Is RedlineBot legal advice?
No. RedlineBot is an AI-powered analysis tool, not a law firm or attorney. It does not provide legal advice and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Always consult a licensed attorney before making legal decisions.
How long does a contract review take?
Most contract reviews are completed in about 60 seconds. You upload your PDF, pay $9 via Stripe, and receive your full clause-by-clause analysis immediately.
What happens to my contract after review?
Your contract PDF is deleted from our servers after the review is complete. We do not store, share, or use your contract data for any other purpose.
Do I need an account to use RedlineBot?
No. RedlineBot requires no account, no subscription, and no sign-up. Upload your contract, pay $9 per review via Stripe, and get your results.

Questions before you upload?

If something feels off, ask a human first. RedlineBot is built for speed, but the promise is simple: clearer contract reads, cleaner pushback, less blind signing.

  • Handled with intention Contracts are processed for the review, then removed. Reduce risk; don't create new piles of documents.
  • Good fit Freelancer agreements, contractor terms, scopes of work, and client paper that needs a fast practical read.
  • Escalate when needed If stakes are high, the jurisdiction is unusual, or terms are complex, get counsel involved.