Event equipment rental contract
The sound and lighting equipment for a concert, wedding, or corporate event is neither set up 24 hours in advance nor dismantled at end of day. Setup window, rehearsal time, event hours, teardown window — each must be stated as a distinct time slot in the contract. Akitle provides an event-rental contract built around the sector's strict time windows.
By: Akitle Legal Team · Last updated: May 29, 2026
What this contract covers
- Equipment identity: sound console channels, speaker power (W), light count, stage/tent dimensions
- Time windows: setup, rehearsal, event, and teardown hours, each stated separately
- Setup and teardown responsibility: which party transports, installs, and dismantles
- Technical-crew scope: sound operator, lighting operator included, how many people
- Daily or hourly fee plus overtime/extension unit price
- Damage, loss, and missing-return compensation with insurance liability
- Electrical infrastructure compatibility (220V/380V) and generator needs
- Cancellation policy and rain/force-majeure protocol for outdoor events
What an event equipment rental contract covers
An event equipment rental contract clearly regulates the rented sound, light, stage, and tent equipment, the setup/rehearsal/event/teardown hours, the technical-crew scope, and damage liability. Disputes arise when setup and teardown windows are not written with precise hours; the Akitle template includes all these fields by default, with identifying data such as brand, model, channel count, and power.
- Equipment identity: sound console channels, speaker watts, light count
- Time windows: setup, rehearsal, event, teardown hours
- Technical staff: sound operator, lighting operator included?
- Backup equipment: replacement window in case of malfunction
- Damage and loss compensation, insurance liability
- Electrical infrastructure compatibility (220V/380V, generator needs)
- Rain protocol for outdoor events
How to prepare an event contract with Akitle
The ready-made event equipment template adapts to different event types (concert, wedding, conference, festival). Hours × equipment pricing is calculated automatically; technical staff fees appear as separate line items. The renter opens the link in their browser, enters event details, and signs on-screen.
As the event date approaches, change requests (time shifts, additional speakers, additional lighting) can be made via an amendment contract — appended to the original's audit trail.
Legal framework
Under Turkish Code of Obligations (TBK) arts. 299 et seq., written form is not a validity requirement for rental contracts; the parties' mutual consent forms the contract under TBK art. 1. An Akitle-signed event equipment rental contract is binding between parties and constitutes a 'document' under HMK art. 199 and 'beginning of written evidence' under HMK art. 202.
In operated event rentals (sound operator, lighting operator), the operator's social security falls to the lessor (per Turkish Labor Law No. 4857). In case of weather or pandemic-related event cancellation, the force majeure clause (TBK art. 136) must be made explicit in the contract.
Instead of downloading a Word/PDF example
Download a static example
- You download a blank Word/PDF file and fill it in by hand
- You must print it and gather the parties for wet-ink signing
- No record of who signed, or when
Sign via link with Akitle
- You fill in a ready template online
- You send a link; the renter approves from their own phone
- Both parties download a PDF with an audit trail
Akitle produces a binding document with an audit trail; it is not a qualified electronic signature under Law No. 5070.
Frequently asked questions
If the event is cancelled one day before, can the full fee be charged?
It depends on the cancellation policy table. The Akitle template defines different refund rates by lead time — e.g., 30 days prior: 100% refund; 15 days prior: 50% refund; 48 hours prior: no refund. The cancellation policy must be in the contract.
Should a sound operator be included in a wedding equipment rental?
In practice, wedding sound rentals are operated because remote equipment operation requires expertise. The Akitle template offers an operated/bare choice — selecting one automatically adds the corresponding hourly fee.
What happens if it rains at an outdoor event?
A rain protocol must be defined in the contract. The Akitle template offers three options: (1) event postponed, equipment carries to a new date with the same terms; (2) event moves to an indoor space, additional setup fee charged; (3) event cancelled, force majeure applies. Selecting one option hides the others in the contract.
Who's responsible for electrical infrastructure incompatibility?
The venue's electrical infrastructure (220V/380V suitability, total wattage available) is within the venue owner's (lessor's) knowledge. The contract should state the venue's infrastructure profile. The Akitle template makes the electrical infrastructure field required; if a generator is needed, it appears as an additional line item.
Can teardown be done at midnight?
Yes if the contract states the teardown time and noise rules. Most municipalities allow nighttime work but noise is restricted after midnight. The Akitle template makes the teardown time field required.
If equipment fails during the event, how quickly does a replacement arrive?
Within the replacement window defined in the contract. The Akitle template offers a '15-minute replacement window' (local events) and a '60-minute replacement window' (out-of-city events); because equipment failure during the event is the most critical risk, this window must be written into the contract.
Is the Akitle signature a qualified e-signature (Law 5070)?
No. Akitle produces a binding document and an audit trail between the parties; the document constitutes evidence under HMK art. 199. It is not, however, a qualified electronic signature under Law No. 5070. Where wet-ink equivalence is required, a notary or qualified e-signature is recommended.
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The information and examples on this page are for general guidance only and do not constitute legal advice. Consult a lawyer for your specific situation.