Contract Template
Updated 2026

Free Feng Shui Consultant Service Agreement

One 'bad vibe' and a pissed-off client will sue you for their business failing while they sit on your unpaid invoice. Without a contract, you're just a volunteer furniture mover waiting for a lawsuit to take your gear and your truck.

Pro Contractor Tip

Insert a 'Limitation of Liability' clause so you aren't on the hook for their bad luck or a sudden drop in their stock portfolio.

Why use a written agreement?

Handshake deals are risky. As a Feng Shui Consultant, "scope creep" is your biggest enemy. A clear agreement ensures everyone agrees on the deliverables before money changes hands.

🛡️ What this sequence covers:

  • Deliverables List
  • Payment Terms
  • IP Rights
  • Revision Limits
  • Cancellation Policy

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Statement of Work

REF: 2026-001

1. Project Background

This Agreement is entered into by and between the Client and the Contractor. The Client wishes to engage the Contractor for professional Feng Shui Consultant services.

2. Scope of Services

The Contractor shall provide the following deliverables:

  • Luo Pan compass site orientation
  • Bagua map floor plan overlay
  • Elemental balance assessment report
  • Furniture and object placement schematic
  • On-site installation of remedial cures
  • Final space clearing walk-through

3. Performance Standards

The Contractor agrees to perform the Feng Shui Consultant services in a professional manner, using the degree of skill and care that is required by current industry standards.

Total ValueVariable

TERMS & CONDITIONS (Summary):

1. Payment: 50% Deposit required.

2. Copyright: Rights transfer to Client upon full payment.

Disclaimer: This template is for educational purposes only.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens if the client keeps asking to 'tweak' things after the plan is set?

You bake a 'Revision Limit' into the agreement; anything past the first two tweaks is a Change Order that costs them extra cash upfront.

How do I stop them from withholding my final check because they don't 'feel' the results yet?

Your contract needs to define 'Completion' as the delivery of the report and layout, not their emotional state, so you get paid the second the paperwork hits the desk.

They want me to move heavy mahogany desks myself—is that part of the job?

Explicitly state in your 'Labor Boundaries' that you're a consultant, not a mover, or you'll be paying for your own back surgery out of pocket.