SAFE Agreement
Simple Agreement for Future Equity for early-stage fundraising.
About this template
Most disputes between small businesses and their counterparties never reach a courtroom — they get resolved by re-reading the contract together. The clearer the contract, the cheaper the resolution.
The SAFE Agreement sits inside FormForge's Contracts collection, and it is structured around the day-to-day reality of how small operators actually use a document like this. Simple Agreement for Future Equity for early-stage fundraising.
Why this kind of document matters
Contracts are a form of communication, not just legal protection. A contract that makes both parties feel respected and clear gets honored. A contract that makes one side feel cornered gets resented and disputed.
Who this template is for
Founders, operators, and small-business owners who need defensible paperwork without a six-figure legal budget. If you are a one-person operation, you can use it as-is. If you have a small team, treat the master copy as the canonical version and have everyone work from a single source so outgoing documents stay visually consistent.
What's inside
- Header block (your business name, logo, contact info, document number, and date)
- Counterparty block (client / employee / vendor name and contact details)
- Body fields specific to a safe agreement
- Totals, signatures, or acceptance section as appropriate
- Notes / terms area for clarifications and small-print policies
- Clear definitions section
- Term and termination clause
- Governing-law and dispute-resolution clause
- Signature blocks for both parties
When to use it
Use this template at the start of any engagement that warrants written terms. Even short engagements benefit from a one-page version of this contract — the act of writing the terms down clarifies the deal for both sides.
How to use it
- Click Use this template in Google Docs. Google will prompt you to make a copy into your own Drive.
- Rename the document to match your situation — the client name, the project, or the period covered.
- Replace placeholder text in the header with your business name, logo, and contact info on a master copy you reuse.
- Fill in the body fields. Delete sections that don't apply — over-trimming a template is almost always better than leaving filler text.
- Re-read end-to-end before sending. A 30-second proofread catches the small mistakes that erode trust.
Tips for getting the most out of it
- Use bullet lists for deliverables. Prose lists get misread; bullet lists do not.
- Always include a termination clause. Both sides need a clear way out.
- Specify the governing-law state. Without it, jurisdiction becomes its own dispute.
- Avoid "best efforts" and "reasonable" without examples. Quantify what those mean for this engagement.
- Define dispute resolution before it is needed. Mediation-then-arbitration clauses keep small disputes out of court.
Treat this contracts template as a starting point, not a finished product. The fastest way to make any template work for your business is to use it once on a real-world situation, then go back and adjust based on what felt off — wording that didn't match how you talk, fields you never filled in, or a section that the recipient kept asking questions about. After two or three real uses, you'll have a version that is genuinely yours.
Frequently asked questions
Can I export it to PDF or Word?
Yes. Use File → Download in Google Docs and pick the format you need. PDF is the safest choice for anything you send externally.
Can I use this commercially?
Yes. FormForge templates are free for any commercial or personal use. We do not claim ownership of documents you create from them.
Can I modify the template?
Absolutely. Modify it freely. The structure is a starting point — your version should reflect your business.
Will the template stay updated?
We periodically refresh templates as practices and standards evolve. Your saved copy stays exactly as it was when you created it.
Should a lawyer review this?
For anything material — significant contracts, employment matters, regulated industries — yes. Templates are starting points, not legal advice.
Last updated: 2026-05-03
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