1. What a Supply Agreement Does
A supply agreement turns an informal buying relationship into a defined, enforceable commitment. It answers, in advance, how much, at what price, and on whose risk.
That certainty is the whole point, because both sides are planning production, staffing, and budgets around a supply that has to be dependable.
What a Supply Agreement Is
A supply agreement is a contract governing the ongoing sale of goods from a supplier to a buyer under agreed terms.
Many companies use a master supply agreement that sets the general terms, with individual purchase orders drawing on it for specific quantities and dates. In the United States, sales of goods fall under Article 2 of the Uniform Commercial Code, which supplies default rules the contract can modify. Article 2 generally applies to sales of goods, but mixed goods-and-services arrangements may require separate treatment of services, software, installation, maintenance, or logistics obligations. Its structure shapes how price, volume, and risk are handled throughout the relationship.
When You Need One Instead of Purchase Orders Alone
A full supply agreement makes sense when the relationship is ongoing and the stakes go beyond a single order.
Standalone purchase orders work for one-off buys, but they rarely address price stability, minimum volumes, quality standards, or what happens in a shortage. A supply agreement locks in those protections and reduces the risk of a supplier walking away or a buyer cutting orders unexpectedly, and long-term arrangements often share features with an outsourcing contract. The agreement should also state which document controls if the master supply agreement, a purchase order, an order acknowledgment, an invoice, or standard terms and conditions conflict. Settling that order of precedence up front prevents a battle over whose form governs.
2. The Terms That Make or Break the Deal
A handful of core terms carry most of the weight in a supply agreement. Getting them precise is what prevents disputes later.
Each term shifts risk between buyer and supplier, so the negotiation is really about who bears which uncertainty.
Price, Quantity, and Delivery
The heart of a supply agreement is how it sets price, how much must be bought or supplied, and how goods are delivered.
Pricing can be fixed, indexed to a benchmark, or cost-plus, often with an adjustment mechanism for changing costs.
Quantity terms range from a fixed amount to a requirements contract for the buyer's needs or an output contract for the supplier's production, where good faith applies and demands or tenders should not be unreasonably disproportionate to stated estimates or prior comparable volumes.
Forecasts should state which portions are binding, nonbinding, or rolling commitments, and whether the supplier must reserve capacity for forecasted demand. Delivery terms, frequently expressed through Incoterms, fix the timing, location, and the point at which risk of loss passes, an area where logistics and freight rules also come into play. The table summarizes the core terms.
| Term | What It Sets | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Price | The amount and any adjustment mechanism | Protects against cost swings |
| Quantity | Fixed, requirements, or output | Defines supply certainty |
| Delivery | Timing, location, and risk of loss | Fixes who bears transit risk |
| Quality | Specifications and acceptance rights | Grounds for rejecting goods |
| Term | Length and renewal | Governs how long the deal lasts |
Quality, Specifications, and Warranties
Quality terms define what conforming goods look like and what the buyer can do when they fall short.
Detailed specifications set the standard, and the agreement should set inspection windows, rejection procedures, cure rights, return logistics, chargebacks, and whether continued use counts as acceptance. Suppliers make express warranties about the product, and the Uniform Commercial Code adds implied warranties of merchantability and, in some cases, fitness for a particular purpose. If a supplier intends to disclaim those implied warranties, the disclaimer must be clear and, for merchantability or fitness, meet the Code's conspicuousness and wording requirements. Weak quality and warranty terms are a common source of costly disputes.
3. Allocating Risk and Handling Disruption
Even a strong supply relationship faces shocks, from raw-material shortages to shipping breakdowns. A good agreement decides in advance who carries those risks.
The clauses that seem like boilerplate are often the ones that matter most when a crisis hits.
Risk Allocation Clauses
The risk allocation clauses decide who pays when things go wrong beyond the basic price and quantity terms.
A force majeure clause should say whether labor shortages, supplier failures, raw-material shortages, port closures, tariffs, cyber incidents, pandemics, or government orders qualify, and what notice and allocation duties follow. Limitation of liability terms, in turn, should specify whether repair, replacement, refund, cover, lost profits, and consequential damages are excluded or capped, while accounting for cases where a limited remedy fails of its essential purpose. Indemnification, insurance, and intellectual property terms round out the picture, and coordinating them with a company's broader risk and governance approach keeps exposure controlled. These provisions are negotiated hardest precisely because they surface only when a problem occurs.
Supply Disruption and Exclusivity
Supply disruption and exclusivity terms decide how the parties handle shortages and whether they can deal with others.
When shortages hit, the Uniform Commercial Code may excuse or require fair allocation of supply in limited impracticability situations, with reasonable notice, and minimum-purchase or take-or-pay terms shift that risk by contract. Exclusivity, where a buyer sources only from one supplier or a supplier serves only one buyer, can add stability but also raises antitrust considerations for exclusive dealing. Exclusive dealing can also create best-efforts obligations unless the agreement states otherwise, so the parties should define the efforts, forecasts, minimums, and performance metrics required. If your supply is business-critical, address shortage allocation and exclusivity before signing, not during the next disruption.
4. Termination, Remedies, and Getting It Right
Every supply agreement should plan for its own end, whether that comes on schedule or through a breach. Clear exit and remedy terms prevent a bad ending from becoming a lawsuit.
Knowing the default remedies also helps each side understand what is truly at stake.
Termination and Remedies for Breach
Termination and remedy terms define how the relationship ends and what each side can recover if the other breaches.
Agreements typically allow termination for cause after a cure period, and sometimes for convenience, along with wind-down or last-time-buy rights to avoid a sudden cutoff. If a supplier fails to deliver, a buyer may cover by purchasing substitute goods and recovering the difference, while a supplier facing a buyer's breach may resell the goods or sue for the price. For unique goods, specific performance may be available. Understanding these remedies, which build on general breach of contract principles, shapes how the agreement is drafted.
Dispute Resolution and When to Use a Lawyer
The agreement should also fix how disputes are resolved and which law governs, especially across borders.
A dispute resolution clause can require arbitration, set the venue, and choose the governing law, which matters greatly when buyer and supplier are in different states or countries, an area tied to international contracts practice. A generic template rarely fits a specific supply relationship, its pricing model, or its risk profile. Small drafting gaps can become expensive when supply is interrupted. Before signing a significant or long-term supply agreement, have counsel align the price, quantity, quality, risk, and exit terms with your actual operations.
5. Getting a Supply Agreement Right: Common Questions
Buyers and suppliers tend to raise the same issues before committing to a long-term deal.
Do I Need a Supply Agreement If I Already Use Purchase Orders?
Often yes. Purchase orders handle individual buys, but they usually do not lock in price stability, minimum volumes, quality standards, or protections during a shortage. A supply agreement sets those terms for the whole relationship, and purchase orders then operate within it. For any ongoing or business-critical supply, a written agreement offers far more c
What Happens If the Purchase Order Conflicts with the Supply Agreement?
Whichever document the parties designated as controlling usually governs. A well-drafted supply agreement includes an order-of-precedence clause stating that the master agreement prevails over purchase orders, acknowledgments, invoices, or standard terms if they conflict. Without that clause, a conflict can trigger a battle of the forms, leaving it unclear which terms actually apply.
What Key Terms Should a Supply Agreement Include?
At a minimum, it should address price and adjustments, quantity, delivery and risk of loss, quality specifications and acceptance, warranties, term and renewal, and termination. Strong agreements also cover force majeure, limitation of liability, indemnification, insurance, intellectual property, and dispute resolution. The right emphasis depends on how critical and how complex the supplied goods are.
What Is the Difference between a Requirements and an Output Contract?
In a requirements contract, the buyer agrees to purchase all it needs of a product from the supplier, while in an output contract, the buyer agrees to take all the supplier produces. Both replace a fixed quantity with a flexible one, and the law requires good faith, so demands or output should not be unreasonably disproportionate to prior dealings or stated estimates.
Who Bears the Risk If Goods Are Damaged in Transit?
It depends on the delivery term. Supply agreements often use Incoterms or Uniform Commercial Code rules to fix the exact point at which risk of loss passes from supplier to buyer, such as when goods are shipped or when they are delivered. Whoever bears the risk at the moment of damage generally absorbs the loss, so the delivery term should be explicit.
What Is a Force Majeure Clause, and Does It Cover Supply Shortages?
A force majeure clause excuses performance when events beyond a party's control make it impossible or impractical. Whether it covers a shortage depends on how it is written, so the clause should list qualifying events, such as disasters, supplier failures, or government orders, and set the notice and allocation duties that follow. A shortage is not automatically excused.
Can a Supplier or Buyer Terminate a Supply Agreement Early?
Only as the agreement allows. Most permit termination for cause after notice and a chance to cure, and some allow termination for convenience with notice. Ending an agreement outside its terms can itself be a breach. Well-drafted agreements also include wind-down or last-time-buy provisions so neither side faces a sudden, damaging cutoff.
What Are My Options If the Other Side Breaches?
They depend on the breach and the contract. A buyer facing a failure to deliver may buy substitute goods and recover the extra cost, while a supplier facing a buyer's breach may resell the goods or sue for the price. Other remedies, including damages and sometimes specific performance for unique goods, may also apply.
Do I Need a Lawyer to Draft or Review a Supply Agreement?
For a significant or long-term agreement, yes. These contracts allocate price, supply, quality, and disruption risk in ways a template cannot tailor to your operations. A lawyer can align the terms with how you actually buy or sell, address force majeure and exclusivity, and prevent gaps that become costly if the supply relationship breaks down.
05 Jan, 2026

