Pricing template
Project Pricing Scope Template
Clear scope is margin protection.
Use a scope checklist before fixed-price project work becomes open-ended.
Run the calculator firstChecklist
Define deliverables, included rounds, meeting cadence, response time, support window, excluded work, client responsibilities, payment milestones, and change-order pricing.
Use it when
Use this before any fixed-price project, retainer renewal, or discounted scope.
Use this with
When to use this
Use this template after you have run the related calculator or named the business assumption you need to act on. The template is meant to turn the result into a next step, not replace the math.
When not to use this
Do not use this as a legal, tax, payroll, accounting, contract, or compliance conclusion. If the result affects filing, worker classification, contracts, payroll, tax elections, or provider terms, use the template to prepare better questions for the right professional.
Download / copy
Print or save this page after you adapt the template to the result you calculated.
Tools that may help after this template
If this pricing workflow repeats, software may help track inputs, owners, reminders, approvals, or records. Kefiw may earn a commission from some links, but recommendations should be based on the decision you are trying to make, not commission size.
FAQ
Should I run the calculator before using the template?
Yes when the template depends on a number, score, threshold, or result state. The template is strongest when it acts on a specific result.
Can I use this as-is?
Use it as a starting point. Adjust the wording, numbers, timing, scope, and assumptions to match your business situation.
How to use this template well
Fill the template with one real offer, not a generic average. Write the price, scope, payment terms, delivery limits, support expectations, and the reason the current price feels risky. Then run the related calculator to check whether the template protects margin or only makes the offer look cleaner.
A pricing template can mislead when it hides unpaid work. Count revisions, meetings, waiting time, payment delay, and support before treating a proposed price as sustainable.