Pressure Washing Contract / Agreement template and PDF guide...

Draft contract terms online, then generate a professional PDF for review and signature. Use this before starting any pressure washing job that involves recurring service...

When to use this template

Draft contract terms online, then generate a professional PDF for review and signature. Use this before starting any pressure washing job that involves recurring service, high-value surfaces, or commercial properties where liability terms must be explicit.

What to include

  • Legal names of both parties, contractor license and insurance policy numbers, property address, and authorized representative for service approvals.
  • Scope of work: every surface listed with area in square feet, cleaning method, PSI range, chemical treatment plan, and service frequency (one-time, monthly, quarterly, annual).
  • Pricing and payment terms: per-visit rate or total contract value, invoicing schedule, payment due date, late fee percentage, and accepted payment methods.
  • Liability and damage clause: pre-existing damage documentation, contractor responsibility limits for surface damage, plant damage, and water intrusion, with photo documentation requirement.
  • Weather policy, rescheduling procedure, cancellation terms with notice period, and automatic renewal clause if applicable.

Common questions

Can I edit this Pressure Washing Contract / Agreement online before both parties sign?
Yes. Update scope, payment terms, and timeline clauses in-browser before locking the final text.
Can I save this Pressure Washing Contract / Agreement as a reusable contract baseline?
Yes. With an account, save it and reuse the structure across projects while customizing client-specific terms.
Can I generate a sign-ready PDF from this Pressure Washing Contract / Agreement?
Yes. Export a clean contract PDF suitable for e-sign workflows or manual signatures.
Do I need a contract for residential one-time jobs?
A one-page agreement is enough. Cover scope (which surfaces), price, and a liability waiver for pre-existing damage like loose paint or cracked mortar.
How do I protect myself from damage claims?
Document the surface condition with photos before you start. Include a clause that you are not liable for damage to already-deteriorated surfaces like peeling paint or rotten wood.
Should I include a weather clause?
Yes. State that you will reschedule at no charge if conditions are unsafe (lightning, high wind, freezing temps) and define who initiates the reschedule.
Should the contract specify PSI limits for different surfaces?
Yes. State maximum PSI for each surface type (e.g., 1,500 for wood decks, 3,000 for concrete). This protects you from claims that you damaged soft surfaces and shows professionalism.
Do I need a written contract for every job?
For any job over a few hundred dollars, yes. A written contract protects both sides and dramatically reduces payment disputes. Verbal agreements are nearly impossible to enforce.
What happens if the customer breaks the contract?
A signed contract gives you legal standing to collect payment for completed work and recover costs. Without one, you have very little recourse.
How do I handle a customer who refuses to sign?
Do not start work without a signed agreement. A customer who will not sign a fair contract is likely to be a problem customer. Protect yourself before tools come out of the truck.

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