Life Intelligence

Red flags to check before you sign with a wedding content creator

Content creators are one of the newest wedding vendor categories and one of the least regulated. A lot of them are excellent. A lot of them are someone''s cousin with a phone and a Canva pricing sheet. Here is the pre-signing checklist that separates them.

Ask for three things before the call even ends

  1. A full, unedited 60-second raw clip from a real wedding, not a polished reel. Reels are edited by specialists. The raw clip tells you whether the person actually knows how to capture.
  2. Two references from weddings in the last six months. Call them. Ask: "Would you hire them again? What surprised you, good or bad?"
  3. A copy of the contract, before the deposit. Read every clause.

Contract clauses that should be there

  • Deliverables spelled out exactly: number of reels, turnaround time, raw footage included or not, music licensing.
  • Response-time commitment: most reputable contracts specify 48–72 business hours.
  • Revision policy: how many rounds, what counts as a "minor" vs "major" change.
  • Kill fee / refund schedule: if THEY cancel, what do you get back? If YOU cancel, what do they keep? Percentages should scale with proximity to the wedding.
  • Backup clause: what happens if they get sick the day of? Most solo vendors have a network; if yours cannot name a backup, that is a risk.
  • Usage rights: do they keep the footage? Can they put your wedding in their portfolio without asking? (This matters if guests include minors.)

Contract clauses that are red flags

  • Non-refundable deposit over 50%.
  • Any "final delivery may take up to 6 months" clause — industry standard is 4–8 weeks for content creators; photographers are a different conversation.
  • Exclusive use of arbitration in a distant county.
  • No specified deliverable count ("a selection of reels at photographer''s discretion").
  • Silence on what happens if they do not show up.

Response-cadence test

Before you sign:

  • Message them at 10am on a Tuesday with a specific question. Time the response.
  • Message them on a Saturday evening. Time the response. (They should NOT respond immediately — that is actually a different red flag. But by Monday morning is reasonable.)
  • Ask a question with a wrong premise in it. Do they correct you, or just agree?

The pre-contract response pattern is the best predictor you have of the post-contract pattern.

Payment hygiene

  • Use a credit card, not Zelle or Venmo, wherever possible. Credit cards let you dispute charges. Zelle transfers are effectively irreversible.
  • Never pay the full balance upfront. Industry standard is a deposit at signing (25–50%), balance due close to the date.
  • Get a paid-in-full receipt every time.

When you should walk away

  • They pressure you to sign same-day.
  • The quote is dramatically below the market rate for Austin (mid-range content creators run $1,200–$3,500 for a wedding day).
  • You cannot get clear answers on the three questions above.
  • Any of the red-flag contract clauses are in the draft and they will not remove them.

Sources: general wedding industry practices as discussed on The Knot Community vendor forums and WeddingWire forums; Texas consumer protection guidance via Texas State Law Library.

AnalysisAutomatedSource: KnowYard EditorialPublished: Apr 17, 2026, 2:43 PM

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