TL;DR: A Service Level Agreement (SLA) defines measurable standards of service that a provider must meet. Without an SLA, disputes about performance quality have no objective baseline.
A Service Level Agreement (SLA) is a contract — or a section of a contract — that defines the expected standard of a service, how performance will be measured, and what happens when the standard is not met. SLAs are used across virtually every industry where services are provided on an ongoing basis.
Common examples include:
Without an SLA, "good service" is entirely subjective. When your IT provider's system is "unavailable," does that mean 5 minutes or 5 hours? When your logistics partner "delivers on time," does that mean same day or within five working days? An SLA answers these questions objectively and creates the foundation for dispute resolution if standards are not met.
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Service description: A clear, detailed description of the services covered by the SLA. This should be specific enough to leave no ambiguity about what is and is not included.
Service level metrics: The specific, measurable standards that define acceptable performance. Common examples:
Measurement methodology: How performance will be measured, by whom, and how often. This should be objective and agreed upon in advance to avoid disputes.
Reporting: How and when the provider will report performance data to the client.
Remedies for SLA breaches (service credits): What the customer receives if service levels are not met. Service credits — typically a percentage reduction in the monthly fee — are the most common remedy. They rarely compensate fully for the impact of poor service, but they create a financial incentive for the provider to meet agreed standards.
Exclusions: Circumstances in which SLA obligations do not apply — typically scheduled maintenance, force majeure events, or failures caused by the customer's own actions or third-party infrastructure outside the provider's control.
Review and adjustment: A mechanism for periodically reviewing and updating service levels as business needs evolve.
The most common SLA failure is setting metrics that are either too vague to be measured or too aspirational to be achieved. Effective SLAs:
Before drafting an SLA, benchmark the provider's historical performance and industry standards. The SLA should represent a committed improvement on the baseline, not a theoretical aspiration.
Effective SLAs also specify what the customer must do to enable the provider to meet the agreed standards. For example:
Failure by the customer to meet their obligations is typically a basis for the provider to claim the SLA obligation is suspended.
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Try it free →| Country | SLA Legal Enforceability | Key Consumer Rights | Common SLA Sectors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 UK | Enforceable; Consumer Rights Act 2015 applies to B2C | Must be fair and transparent | IT, telecoms, logistics, facilities |
| 🇫🇷 France | Enforceable; Code Civil governs | Consumer protection applies | IT, telecoms, BPO |
| 🇸🇪 Sweden | Enforceable | Konsumenttjänstlagen (Consumer Services Act) | IT, facilities, telecoms |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Enforceable; ACL prevents unfair terms | ACL guarantee standards apply | IT, telecoms, cloud, logistics |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | Enforceable; Fair Trading Act applies | Consumer Guarantees Act standards | IT, telecoms |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Enforceable; provincial consumer law | Varies by province | IT, cloud, telecommunications |
| 🇺🇸 USA | Enforceable; UCC and state law apply | FTC regulations; state consumer law | IT, cloud, logistics, SaaS |
Key government resources:
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Helpful tools:
MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. SLAs for significant service relationships should be reviewed by a qualified attorney.
Q: What is the difference between an SLA and a contract?
A: A contract is the overarching legal agreement between parties. An SLA is typically either a standalone document or a schedule within a larger services contract that specifically defines performance standards. An SLA without a binding contract to support it may not be enforceable. The SLA defines what "good service" looks like; the contract determines the consequences of not meeting it.
Q: What is "uptime" and how is it measured?
A: Uptime refers to the percentage of time a system or service is available and functioning. It is typically measured over a rolling month or year. 99.9% uptime over a year allows approximately 8.77 hours of downtime. 99.99% allows approximately 52 minutes. Cloud and hosting providers typically publish their SLA terms publicly. Always check how downtime is defined (is a slow system "down"?) and how maintenance windows are treated.
Q: Can I terminate a service agreement if the provider persistently fails to meet SLA?
A: This depends entirely on the terms of your agreement. Many service contracts limit remedies to service credits rather than termination. However, persistent material breach of an SLA may give rise to a right to terminate for breach even without an express termination right. Consult a qualified attorney if you are dealing with persistent SLA failures and considering termination.
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