Contract Clause Identifier
Paste a contract. Get clause-by-clause analysis with risk flags and a list of standard protections that are missing.
- Good at:
- Flagging risky clauses and spotting missing standard protections in a contract.
- Not for:
- Redlining or rewriting contracts — this identifies issues, it does not edit.
Workflow assistance only. Not legal advice. Review every clause before relying on it.
The analyzer reads clause language, not party identity. You can paste a redacted contract — e.g. with [PARTY A], [PARTY B], and [GOVERNING STATE] — and still get complete analysis.
Clause-by-clause analysis will appear here once the tool runs.
Questions people ask first
What does the Contract Clause Identifier do?
Reads a contract clause-by-clause, flags risky language, and lists standard protections that are missing. Output is a sortable list of clauses with risk levels, a short summary, and a “favors” line that says which party the contract leans toward.
Will it redline or rewrite the contract for me?
No. This is an identifier, not an editor. It tells you which clauses to look at and why; the redline is your job. The plan-to-use case is “read this contract in 4 minutes before my call,” not “rewrite this contract while I'm on a call.”
Can I paste a redacted contract?
Yes — that's the recommended approach. The analyzer reads clause language, not party identity. Replace party names, addresses, and governing state with bracketed placeholders and you still get the full analysis. Three example contracts on the page show the pattern.
How long can the contract be?
Fifty thousand characters of input — about 80 pages of typical contract language. For longer contracts, paste the meaningful sections (the operative clauses) and skip exhibits and signature pages.
What about contract types you don't list?
Select “Other” or leave the type field on auto-detect. The analyzer recognises clause patterns across most US commercial contract types; the type selector helps it know which standard protections to expect, but it isn't a hard filter.