Freelance Writing Nightmares: How I Learned to Spot Bad Clients and Protect Myself

Kayle

New member
Joined
Feb 20, 2026
Messages
4
Okay, I need to share this so others don't make the same mistakes I did. When I first started freelance writing, I was so excited to get ANY client that I ignored every red flag. I worked without contracts, accepted ridiculously low rates, and delivered work before getting paid. Guess what happened? I got ghosted. Multiple times. Hundreds of dollars of work, gone. I remember spending an entire weekend writing a 3,000-word white paper for a "startup founder" who seemed so professional. Sent it Monday morning. Never heard from him again. No payment, no reply, nothing. I was devastated. But you know what? Those lessons made me smarter. Now I have systems in place, and my freelance writing experience is actually enjoyable. Here's what I wish someone had told me:
  1. Always use a contract. Even for small projects. Even for friends. Even if it feels awkward. I use a simple template from the Freelancers Union.
  2. Get 50% upfront. If a client won't pay a deposit, they're not serious.
  3. Trust your gut. If an email feels weird, if they're pushy, if they won't hop on a quick call—run.
  4. Don't work for "exposure." Exposure doesn't pay rent. (Okay, maybe once for a nonprofit you love, but not for profit-seeking companies.)
I'm not bitter—I'm just smarter now. And I actually have amazing clients who respect me and pay fairly. The bad ones taught me what to avoid. Anyone else have freelance writing horror stories? Let's commiserate and learn together!
 
My worst was a "client" who sent me a 50-page brand guide, required three rounds of revisions, then claimed my work was "plagiarized" (it wasn't) and threatened to sue me unless I refunded the deposit. I had a contract (thank GOD) and told him to kick rocks. He disappeared. The contract saved my butt. To everyone reading: CONTRACTS AREN'T OPTIONAL. Even a simple one-page agreement is better than nothing. Also, Kayle, your point about trust your gut is so real. Every time I've ignored that little voice, I've regretted it. Now I listen immediately. Great post!
 
Back
Top Bottom