Character Licensing Agreement: What Creators Give Away without Knowing



A character licensing agreement transfers rights a creator may not realize they have signed away until the licensee exploits them in ways the creator never anticipated.

A creator who grants merchandise rights without excluding digital products has licensed mobile games, NFTs, and virtual goods. A creator who grants entertainment rights without excluding adaptation has licensed sequels, prequels, and spinoffs. A creator who grants rights without a sublicense restriction has authorized the licensee to bring in third parties the creator never approved. None of these outcomes require the licensee to act in bad faith. They all follow from how the agreement was written. An attorney who handles character licensing agreements and entertainment and media law matters can audit every right the agreement transfers before the signature commits the creator to terms they will spend years regretting.

Character licensing agreements derive their legal force from the licensor's exclusive rights under 17 U.S.C. § 106, which grants the copyright owner control over reproduction, distribution, display, performance, and derivative works, with the license operating as a contractual carve-out of some subset of those rights for a defined purpose, territory, and term.

Contents


1. What Creators Sign Away in a Character Licensing Agreement without Reading the Fine Print


The grant of rights clause is the most consequential provision in any character licensing agreement, and it is almost always drafted by the licensee's counsel to capture the broadest possible scope of rights using language that appears narrower than it is.

Merchandise rights sound limited. In practice, they extend to every medium and format not expressly excluded: physical products, digital products, print-on-demand, e-commerce exclusives, subscription box products, and promotional tie-ins all fall within merchandise rights unless the agreement defines merchandise narrowly and excludes each category specifically. Entertainment rights sound bounded by the word entertainment. In practice, they encompass film, television, streaming, podcasting, live performance, theme park attractions, and any other format that conveys narrative content, unless each format is enumerated and limited or excluded.

Reserved rights, which are the rights the creator keeps rather than grants, are only as protective as their specificity. A creator who reserves the right to write novels featuring the character retains that right. The same creator has almost certainly not reserved the right to write graphic novels, comics, or illustrated books unless those formats are each explicitly named. An attorney who handles character copyright and technology licensing and IP transactions matters can map every right the creator intends to keep and ensure each appears in the reserved rights clause rather than the grant.



How Sublicense Rights Let Licensees Build Businesses the Creator Never Authorized


A sublicense right, when granted, allows the licensee to extend the character license to third parties of the licensee's choosing without the creator's approval of each new party, effectively giving the licensee the power to put the character in hands the creator has never vetted and would not have chosen.

A toy company with sublicense rights can authorize a manufacturer in any jurisdiction to produce the toys, a retailer to create co-branded promotional materials, and a digital partner to develop a mobile game based on the toy line, all without seeking the creator's consent for any individual arrangement. The creator discovers these sublicensed uses when the character appears on products, in markets, or in contexts that were not part of any conversation the creator had with the original licensee.

Sublicense rights should be either excluded entirely or granted only with specific constraints: requiring the creator's written approval of each proposed sublicensee, limiting sublicensing to the same category and territory as the original license, requiring the sublicensee to be bound by the same quality control provisions that apply to the licensee, and making the licensee financially responsible for the sublicensee's compliance. An attorney who handles intellectual property and character licensing matters can structure sublicense provisions that give the licensee operational flexibility without allowing the character to proliferate beyond the creator's control.

Right Granted without RestrictionWhat the Licensee Can DoWhat the Creator Loses
Merchandise rights, undefinedDigital products, NFTs, virtual goods, subscriptionsSeparate digital licensing revenue stream
Entertainment rights, undefinedFilm, streaming, podcast, live performance, theme parksAdaptation rights in every entertainment format
Sublicense right, unrestrictedAuthorize any third party in any jurisdictionApproval over who uses the character
Quality control, no timelineBlock products indefinitely without explanationLicensee's ability to release on any schedule


2. What a Character Licensing Agreement Costs the Creator When Royalties Are Miscalculated


Royalty provisions that appear straightforward at signing become the most contested terms in the relationship when the licensee's products succeed, because every percentage point of the royalty rate and every deduction in the net sales definition represents real money when applied to substantial revenue.

Net sales, the base on which royalties are typically calculated, is defined by the licensee's counsel to include as many deductions as possible: returns, allowances, discounts to distributors and retailers, freight charges, sales taxes, manufacturing defects, and marketing co-op charges are each deductions that reduce the royalty base before the rate is applied. A royalty rate of ten percent applied to a net sales definition that deducts 40 percent of gross revenue produces a 6 percent effective royalty on the licensee's actual revenue, not the 10 percent the creator believed they were receiving.

Minimum guaranteed royalties protect the creator when the licensee underperforms, requiring a defined payment regardless of whether the licensee's actual royalties reach that level. Without a minimum guarantee, an exclusive licensee can acquire a character's rights, put minimal effort into commercialization, pay no royalties because no sales occur, and hold the exclusive rights for the full license term while preventing the creator from licensing to anyone who would actually exploit the character. An attorney who handles media, sport and entertainment and character licensing matters can structure minimum guarantees at levels that make exclusivity expensive enough to ensure the licensee performs.



How Quality Control Provisions Give Creators Authority over Their Character'S Image


Quality control provisions are the mechanism through which a creator preserves the right to refuse products, marketing, and uses that would damage the character's reputation, and a quality control provision without an enforcement mechanism is an approval right the creator cannot actually exercise.

An effective quality control provision requires the licensee to submit products for approval at defined stages: concept design, prototype, pre-production sample, and finished goods. It specifies the creator's approval timeline, typically ten to fifteen business days, after which the agreement must specify whether silence constitutes approval, rejection, or an extension request. A quality control provision that allows the creator unlimited time to respond gives the creator a blocking mechanism but also exposes the creator to a tortious interference or breach claim from a licensee whose product schedule is disrupted by an indefinitely delayed approval.

Trademark law independently requires quality control over licensed uses of a trademarked character name or visual identity, because a licensor who grants trademark rights without exercising meaningful quality control risks losing those trademark rights through naked licensing abandonment. A creator who owns both copyright and trademark in a character must maintain quality control as both a contractual matter and a trademark law requirement. An attorney who handles brand protection and trademark law and character licensing matters can structure the quality control provisions to satisfy trademark maintenance requirements while giving the creator practical approval authority over product development.



3. What a Character Licensing Agreement Must Say to Protect the Creator after Signing


Termination provisions, reversion rights, and post-termination obligations collectively determine whether the creator can reclaim control of the character when the relationship fails, and agreements that are drafted primarily to enable the deal rather than to plan for its failure leave creators with limited recourse when things go wrong.

Termination for material breach requires the creator to provide written notice of the breach and a defined cure period, typically 30 to 60 days, before termination becomes effective. A creator who terminates without providing the required notice is in breach of the agreement regardless of how egregious the licensee's conduct was, which can expose the creator to a wrongful termination claim from a licensee who would otherwise have no defenses. Automatic termination events, including the licensee's insolvency, bankruptcy filing, unauthorized assignment, and criminal conviction related to the character's use, should trigger immediate termination without a cure period.

Reversion of rights provisions return the licensed rights to the creator when the licensee fails to meet performance milestones, allowing the creator to reclaim and re-license underperforming rights without waiting for the license term to expire naturally. A reversion clause tied to minimum guaranteed royalties, product development timelines, and distribution benchmarks gives the creator a continuous mechanism to evaluate the licensee's performance and reclaim rights that are not being exploited to the creator's commercial standards. An attorney who handles copyright laws and character licensing agreement drafting can identify which termination events the creator is most likely to encounter and ensure each has a clear contractual remedy.



How Creators Can Reclaim Character Rights under Federal Copyright Law


Beyond the contractual termination provisions, the Copyright Act provides creators with a non-waivable right to reclaim rights transferred in a character licensing agreement after a defined period, regardless of what the agreement says about its duration.

Under 17 U.S.C. § 203, authors who transferred copyright or granted exclusive licenses after January 1, 1978 can terminate those transfers during the five-year window that opens 35 years after the transfer by serving advance written notice on the licensee and filing the notice with the Copyright Office. The termination right cannot be waived in the original agreement, and any provision in a character licensing agreement that purports to extend the license beyond the termination window or that requires the creator to forfeit termination rights is unenforceable.

A licensee who built substantial commercial infrastructure around a character license has no legal protection against a creator's valid statutory termination notice, and the termination extinguishes the license regardless of how many years remain on the contractual term. Creators who are approaching the 35-year window on significant character transfers and licensees who have made major investments in licensed character properties both need to evaluate their positions before the termination window opens rather than after. An attorney who handles copyright litigation and copyright termination matters can calculate whether the termination window is approaching and prepare the required statutory notice or evaluate the licensee's exposure.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Character Licensing Agreements


Character licensing agreement questions arrive from creators who signed a deal quickly and now cannot understand why the character appears in places they never approved, from licensees whose grant turned out not to cover what their product required, and from both sides when the relationship has broken down and neither party agrees on what the contract allows. Those situations drive the same set of threshold questions, answered here.



What Is a Character Licensing Agreement and What Rights Does It Actually Transfer?


A character licensing agreement is a contract through which a character owner, the licensor, grants a third party, the licensee, the right to use the character in specified ways while retaining ownership of the underlying intellectual property and all rights not explicitly granted. The agreement transfers a defined bundle of rights limited by the grant's scope, the specified territory, the license term, and the approved field of use. Rights not explicitly named in the grant are reserved by the licensor, but in practice licensees routinely interpret ambiguous grant language broadly, making specificity in the grant and the reserved rights clause the creator's primary protection.



What Rights Do Creators Accidentally Give Away in Character Licensing Agreements?


The most common unintended transfers are digital rights granted through broad merchandise definitions that creators assumed covered only physical products, adaptation rights granted through broad entertainment definitions that creators assumed covered only one medium, sublicense rights that allow the licensee to bring in unapproved third parties, and sequel and derivative work rights that allow the licensee to create new stories and products featuring the character without returning to the creator. Each of these outcomes follows from how the agreement defines the licensed rights rather than from any bad faith by the licensee. Specificity in the grant clause and an exhaustive reserved rights provision are the only reliable protection.



What Are Minimum Guaranteed Royalties and Why Do Creators Need Them?


Minimum guaranteed royalties require the licensee to pay a defined amount per royalty period regardless of actual sales, protecting the creator against a licensee who acquires exclusive rights and then does not actively commercialize the character. Without a minimum guarantee, an exclusive licensee can hold the character rights for the full license term, pay nothing because no sales occur, and prevent the creator from licensing to anyone else who would actually exploit the character. The minimum guarantee is typically structured as an advance against earned royalties and should be set at a level that makes exclusivity expensive enough to ensure the licensee maintains genuine commercial activity.



What Can a Creator Do When the Licensee Uses the Character in Unapproved Ways?


The creator's first remedy is typically a written notice of breach citing the specific unauthorized use and demanding cure within the agreement's cure period. If the cure period expires without resolution, the creator can terminate the agreement and seek injunctive relief to stop the unauthorized use immediately, followed by damages for the breach. A copyright infringement claim is available when the licensee's unauthorized use falls outside the license scope, because use of a copyrighted character outside the scope of the license is infringement rather than merely a contract breach, allowing the creator to seek statutory damages and attorney's fees in federal court. An attorney who handles copyright infringement lawsuit and licensing breach matters can evaluate whether the unauthorized use supports an infringement claim or a contract breach claim and which produces the faster and larger recovery.



How Does Quality Control Work in a Character Licensing Agreement?


Quality control provisions give the creator the right to approve the licensee's products, marketing materials, and public uses of the character before they reach consumers. Effective quality control requires submission of materials at defined production stages, a specified approval timeline with consequences for missed deadlines, clear standards for what constitutes adequate quality, and the right to inspect the licensee's manufacturing facilities and review finished goods before distribution. Trademark law independently requires quality control: a creator who owns a trademark in the character's name or visual identity must exercise meaningful quality control over licensed uses or risk losing the trademark through naked licensing abandonment, regardless of what the contract says about approval rights.



Can a Creator Take Back a Character License That Was Signed Years Ago?


Yes, through two separate mechanisms. The Copyright Act's termination right under 17 U.S.C. § 203 allows creators who transferred copyright or granted exclusive licenses after January 1, 1978 to reclaim those rights during the five-year window that opens 35 years after the transfer, regardless of what the agreement says. This right cannot be waived in the original contract. Separately, a character licensing agreement can be terminated for material breach when the licensee fails to pay royalties, uses the character outside the licensed scope, or violates quality control standards, subject to the agreement's notice and cure requirements. An attorney who handles music licensing and distribution and copyright termination matters can evaluate both paths and identify which produces the fastest and most complete recovery of the creator's rights.


23 Mar, 2026


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