Contract review in Bristol.
Same day. No solicitor needed.
Bristol solicitors charge £180-£330 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Tech MSAs, aerospace supply agreements, financial services contracts, and employment documents.
No credit card required. First 3 reviews free.
Same contract review. A fraction of the solicitor cost.
- ✗ £180-£330/hr billing rate
- ✗ 3-5 business day turnaround
- ✗ £700-£2,500 per MSA review
- ✗ Inconsistent review standards
- ✗ No playbook customisation
- ✓ Flat monthly subscription
- ✓ Results in under 2 minutes
- ✓ Unlimited reviews included
- ✓ Same rules applied every time
- ✓ Fully customisable playbooks
Technology MSAs for Bristol startups and scale-ups carry significant risk in three areas: IP ownership (who owns deliverables and background IP brought into the engagement), liability caps (often set far too low relative to contract value), and data protection obligations. Key issues include ensuring the company retains IP in anything it creates, that liability caps are symmetrical, and that SLA remedies are meaningful rather than nominal. Kontractually reviews these against your configured playbook rules before you sign.
Bristol solicitors typically charge £180-£330 per hour for commercial contract review. Tech and aerospace-sector specialists at larger firms charge towards the higher end. A standard NDA or SaaS agreement review costs £300-£700; a full MSA review costs £1,000-£3,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews at a fraction of that cost.
Aerospace supply chain contracts - whether for Airbus, Rolls-Royce, or their tier-2 and tier-3 suppliers - tend to be heavily one-sided with strict quality, delivery, and liability obligations. Kontractually flags uncapped liability for production delay, one-sided termination for convenience rights, inadequate notice for engineering changes, and IP assignment clauses that may transfer more than intended. You set the rules based on your standard terms; Kontractually applies them consistently across every agreement.
Under English law, the default position for IP ownership in a contract depends on the type of IP and the relationship. For commissioned works, copyright generally belongs to the creator unless there is a written assignment. For software developed by an employee, the employer typically owns it. For work done by a contractor, the contractor often retains IP unless there is an express assignment clause. Kontractually flags contracts that lack clear IP ownership provisions, allowing you to address this before signing rather than after a dispute arises.
Review every contract before you sign. No solicitor required.
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