A quote is not a contract—but it matters
A quotation is a formal price offer: what you deliver, for how much, how long the price holds, and how you get paid. Once accepted by email or signature, it often becomes an attachment to the contract.
Too casual looks unprofessional; too legalistic confuses clients. Aim for clear structure, defined scope and verifiable numbers.
Recommended layout (8 blocks)
- Header: quote number, issue date, valid until
- From / To: company, contact, phone, email
- Summary: one or two sentences on background and goals
- Line items: item, spec, qty, unit, unit price, amount
- Totals: subtotal, tax, discount, grand total (state currency)
- Payment terms: deposit %, milestones, net days
- Assumptions & exclusions: travel, third-party licenses, etc.
- Notes: prices subject to final written confirmation
See also how to write a quotation.
Pricing models
| Model | Best for |
|---|---|
| Day / hour rate | Consulting, design, open-ended dev |
| Fixed price | Scoped websites, apps, branding packs |
| Per deliverable | N posters, M articles |
| Retainer | Monthly maintenance, ops |
Always state revision rounds and out-of-scope rate (e.g. extra days at $X/day).
Payment milestone example
- 30% on signing → 30% after prototype → 30% on UAT → 10% after warranty
- Or 50% upfront, 50% within 7 days of go-live
Avoid “100% on completion” unless it is a trusted repeat client or tiny job.
Draft faster with AI
Skip the blank spreadsheet: use the AI quote generator with the freelance quotation template, describe the job, then edit against the checklist above.
Compare with quotation examples in your industry.
Quote vs estimate vs invoice
- Estimate: rough budget → estimate vs quotation
- Quotation: firm price for defined scope
- Invoice: bill after delivery → quote vs invoice
Mistakes to avoid
- Total price only, no line items
- No validity date
- Unclear tax-inclusive vs plus-tax
- Verbal promises not written into scope or notes
Next step
Generate a first draft with the free quotation maker → export Excel → email → contract and invoice after acceptance.