What's on the Contract PDF

Written By Dennis Rodin

Last updated 16 days ago

MonuDesk automatically generates a contract when you create a quote using Save as Quote or when you confirm an order using Save as Confirmed Order. The contract is saved in the order's Files section alongside your other documents. You do not need to do anything to generate it.

The contract is a two-page document. The first page is the invoice. The second page is the sales agreement.

Empty fields: If you skipped optional fields when creating the order (cemetery, color, finish, size), the PDF renders Not specified in those positions instead of leaving blank space. Fill in the missing fields from Edit Order and regenerate the PDF to update it.


Page one: Invoice

The first page is the same invoice that is generated for every order. It contains all order details, line items, totals, and signature lines.

Learn more: What's on the Invoice PDF


Page two: Sales Agreement

The second page is a standard monument company sales agreement. It includes the customer information, order details, and terms of the sale. All values are pulled automatically from the order data you entered during the quote process.

If multiple drawings were uploaded to the order, all of them appear in the Design Information section on page one. One drawing shows at full width. Two drawings show side by side. Three or more drawings stack vertically. Sketches built in the Sketch & Inscription step are treated the same way and appear here alongside any uploaded drawings.


Can I change the contract text?

Yes. The contract language is customizable from Settings β†’ Documents. Edit the pre-loaded contract text with your own warranty terms, payment policies, or installation conditions. Save it once and every contract you generate from then on uses your version.

Learn more: How to Customize Your Contract Text

Important: Consult your local lawyer

The contract is a starting point, not legal advice. State laws vary, and your local regulations may require specific language or disclosures. Have a local lawyer review the contract to make sure it meets the legal requirements in your state before using it with customers.


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