A distribution agreement is the contract that connects manufacturers or producers with the companies that sell their products to end customers. These agreements govern hundreds of billions of dollars in annual commerce — from consumer electronics and pharmaceuticals to food and beverage, industrial equipment, and software.
Despite their economic importance, distribution agreements are frequently under-documented. A manufacturer may spend months perfecting a product but enter into a distribution relationship with little more than a handshake and a price list. The result is predictable: territorial conflicts between distributors, pricing disputes, failure to meet sales targets, unauthorized discounting, IP misuse, and termination battles over existing inventory and customer relationships.
This guide covers every critical provision in a modern distribution agreement, explains the strategic differences between exclusive and non-exclusive arrangements, addresses pricing and territory structures, and provides practical guidance for building distribution relationships that protect both manufacturers and distributors while maximizing market penetration.
Core Structure of a Distribution Agreement
A distribution agreement establishes the terms under which a distributor purchases products from a manufacturer (or supplier) and resells them within a defined territory or market. Unlike an agency agreement — where the agent sells on behalf of the principal — a distributor buys and resells in their own name, assumes inventory risk, and earns its margin through the spread between purchase price and resale price.
Products and Territory
The agreement must clearly define:
- Product scope: Which specific products or product lines the distributor is authorized to sell. Use product codes, model numbers, or defined categories rather than generic descriptions. Address how new products are added during the term
- Territory: The geographic area where the distributor is authorized to sell. This can be a country, region, state, zip code cluster, or even specific customer segments (e.g., government accounts, healthcare facilities, OEM customers)
- Channel restrictions: Whether the distributor can sell through all channels (retail, wholesale, e-commerce, government procurement) or is limited to specific channels
- Online sales: In the e-commerce era, territory definitions must address whether the distributor can sell online to customers outside their physical territory
Exclusive vs. Non-Exclusive
This is the most strategically significant decision in any distribution arrangement:
Exclusive distribution:
- The manufacturer appoints only one distributor in the defined territory
- The distributor gets the full benefit of their market development efforts without competing distributors undercutting their pricing
- In return, the manufacturer typically requires minimum purchase commitments, marketing investment, and sales performance targets
- Failure to meet minimums may convert the exclusive arrangement to non-exclusive or trigger termination
Non-exclusive distribution:
- The manufacturer can appoint multiple distributors in the same territory
- Each distributor competes on service, availability, pricing (within MAP restrictions), and customer relationships
- Lower commitment from both sides — easier to enter and exit the relationship
- Risk of channel conflict and price erosion between competing distributors
Selective distribution (hybrid):
- The manufacturer limits the number of distributors but appoints more than one — typically based on qualifications, geographic coverage, or customer segment specialization
- Common in luxury goods, professional equipment, and specialty products where brand image and customer service matter
Pricing and Financial Terms
- Transfer pricing: The price at which the manufacturer sells to the distributor. This may be a fixed price list (updated periodically), a discount off the manufacturer's suggested retail price (MSRP), or a cost-plus formula
- Minimum Advertised Price (MAP): The lowest price at which the distributor can advertise the product. MAP policies protect brand value and prevent destructive price competition between distributors
- Payment terms: Net-30 to Net-60 for established relationships; letters of credit or prepayment for new or international distributors
- Volume discounts: Tiered pricing that incentivizes larger orders
- Price protection: If the manufacturer lowers prices, whether the distributor receives a credit on existing inventory purchased at the higher price
Performance Obligations and Marketing
Minimum Purchase Commitments
Most exclusive distribution agreements include minimum purchase requirements:
- Annual minimums: The total dollar amount or unit quantity the distributor must purchase per year
- Quarterly or monthly breakdowns: More granular minimums that prevent the distributor from back-loading orders at year-end
- Ramp-up period: The first 6-12 months may have reduced minimums as the distributor builds market presence
- Consequences of shortfall: Conversion from exclusive to non-exclusive, renegotiation of terms, or termination rights for the manufacturer
- Growth escalators: Minimums that increase annually by a negotiated percentage, reflecting expected market growth and the benefit of an established relationship
Marketing and Sales Obligations
The agreement should specify each party's marketing responsibilities:
Distributor obligations:
- Maintain a dedicated sales team with product training
- Participate in trade shows, industry events, and local marketing campaigns
- Stock minimum inventory levels for key products (to ensure availability)
- Provide quarterly sales reports and market intelligence
- Maintain showroom or demo capabilities (for complex products)
- Use manufacturer-approved branding, messaging, and product positioning
Manufacturer obligations:
- Provide product training materials, samples, and demo units
- Supply marketing collateral (catalogs, data sheets, digital assets)
- Co-op marketing funds (typically a percentage of the distributor's purchases, credited toward approved marketing activities)
- Technical support for complex customer inquiries
- Warranty service and returns processing
Sales Reporting and Forecasting
- Point-of-sale data: The distributor reports actual sell-through data (not just purchases from the manufacturer) to help the manufacturer understand end-customer demand
- Inventory reports: Regular updates on inventory levels, aging, and slow-moving stock
- Sales forecasts: Rolling 3-6 month forecasts to support the manufacturer's production planning
- Customer information: Whether the manufacturer has visibility into the distributor's customer base — this is often heavily negotiated, as the distributor may view customer relationships as their core competitive asset
Termination, Transition, and Contract Execution
Term and Renewal
Distribution agreements typically have initial terms of 2-5 years, with renewal options. Common structures:
- Fixed term with mutual renewal: Automatic renewal for successive 1-2 year terms unless either party gives 90-180 days' notice
- Rolling term: The agreement continues indefinitely until terminated by either party with notice
- Performance-based renewal: Renewal is contingent on the distributor meeting minimum purchase commitments and performance standards
Termination Rights
For cause:
- Material breach not cured within 30-60 days after written notice
- Insolvency, bankruptcy, or assignment for the benefit of creditors
- Change of control without consent
- Failure to meet minimum purchase requirements (after a cure period)
- Violation of anti-corruption, export control, or sanctions laws
For convenience:
- Either party may terminate with 6-12 months' written notice (longer notice periods are appropriate for distributors who have invested significantly in market development)
Post-Termination Obligations
The most contentious aspect of distribution agreement termination is the transition:
- Existing inventory: The distributor's right to sell remaining inventory for a specified period (typically 90-180 days), or the manufacturer's obligation to repurchase unsold inventory at the original purchase price
- Active orders: Orders placed before termination notice should be fulfilled under existing terms
- Customer transition: Whether the manufacturer can contact the distributor's customers directly, or whether there's a transition period during which the distributor continues to service existing accounts
- Warranty obligations: The distributor's obligation to honor warranties on products sold during the term
- Financial settlement: Outstanding payments, co-op marketing credits, and price protection claims must be settled within a defined period
Contract Execution and Management
Distribution agreements are complex, multi-party documents that often involve:
- The manufacturer's legal and commercial teams
- The distributor's ownership and management
- Sometimes, intermediary agents or parent companies
ZiaSign simplifies the execution process with multi-party signing workflows, version tracking for negotiated amendments, and secure storage that makes the executed agreement accessible to authorized stakeholders on both sides.
Execute distribution agreements with ZiaSign →