Analyze vendor and supplier contracts in minutes. Understand payment terms, SLAs, liability caps, and auto-renewal clauses before you commit.
A new SaaS tool sends over a 40-page Master Service Agreement — you need to find the SLA and uptime guarantees but they're buried somewhere in Section 12
The auto-renewal clause might lock you in for another year with only 30 days' notice to cancel
You're not sure what happens if THEY breach the contract — all the liability language seems to favor them
Liability caps limit their damages to 3 months of fees — even if they cause a major outage
You need to understand what you're signing but can't afford a lawyer for every vendor relationship
Vendor contracts are designed to protect the vendor. Without careful review, you might be locked into unfavorable terms for years.
Net 30, 60, or 90 days? Are there late payment penalties? Is payment required upfront? Understanding cash flow impact is critical for budgeting.
How much notice is required to cancel? 30, 60, or 90 days? Does it auto-renew for another full year? Missing the cancellation window can lock you into another expensive contract term.
Is there a service level agreement? What uptime percentage is guaranteed (99.9% vs 99%? makes a big difference)? What happens if they miss it? Do you get credits or refunds?
Most vendors limit their liability to fees paid (often 3-12 months). If they cause major damage, this might be inadequate. For critical services, negotiate higher caps.
Critical for SaaS agreements. Do you own your data? Can you export it? What happens to your data if you cancel? Ensure you have clear data ownership and portability rights.
How much notice is required? Can you terminate for convenience or only for cause? What happens to your data? Are there termination fees? Clear exit strategy protects you.
Can the vendor increase prices annually? By how much (CPI, fixed %, unlimited)? Can you terminate if prices increase too much? Unlimited increases can blow your budget.
Who covers what liabilities? Does the vendor indemnify you for IP infringement claims? Do you have to indemnify them for your use of the service? Broad indemnification can be risky.
Some contracts allow the vendor to modify terms with just email notice. This gives them too much power. Look for language requiring your consent for material changes.
Is email support included? Phone support? What's the response time? Premium support often costs extra. Understand what level of support you're actually getting.
Auto-renewal with 30 days or less cancellation notice. Easy to miss and get locked in for another year.
Liability capped at 3 months fees or less. Too low for critical business services that could cause major damage if they fail.
No service level agreement or weak uptime commitments (95% uptime = ~36 hours downtime per month).
Vendor can change terms at any time with just email notice. You have no say in material changes.
No clear data export rights. If you cancel, you might lose access to your data or pay expensive export fees.
Vendor can increase prices by any amount annually. No cap or reasonable limits on increases.
You must indemnify the vendor for almost anything, including their own mistakes or negligence.
Most businesses work with dozens of vendors. Denser lets you upload ALL your vendor contracts and ask questions across the entire portfolio.
Example Query:
"Which vendors have auto-renewal clauses?"
Example Query:
"Show me all contracts expiring in the next 90 days"
Example Query:
"Compare liability caps across all my SaaS vendors"
Example Query:
"Which vendors can increase prices without limit?"
Get instant answers across your entire vendor portfolio. Perfect for contract audits, renewal planning, and risk assessment.
Drag and drop any PDF or Word document — MSAs, SOWs, SaaS agreements, supplier contracts. Processing takes under 30 seconds.
Ask questions in plain English:
Every answer shows the exact page and section where the information appears. Click to verify the source. No guessing, just facts.
What used to take 2-3 hours of reading now takes 5-10 minutes of asking questions. Focus on decision-making instead of hunting through documents.
Upload any vendor agreement and get instant analysis. No credit card required.