Work From Home Agreement Form Template

A standing remote arrangement made official — workspace, safety checklist, equipment on record, and a signature that makes it an agreement, not a vibe.

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This records a standing work-from-home arrangement — the checklist items are conditions of the agreement, so read each one before ticking it.

Where the work is actually performed — it matters for insurance and tax.

Tick every line — each one is a condition of the agreement.

Sign above

A remote-work request asks permission; a work-from-home agreement creates obligations. The distinction sounds legalistic until something goes wrong — an injury at the kitchen desk, a stolen laptop, an insurance question about where work is actually performed — and suddenly the difference between "we sort of knew" and "we have a signed agreement dated March" is the whole conversation. This form produces the second thing.

Why these fields. Legal name, position, and start date make the document citable. The working-pattern selector matters because "remote" is not one arrangement — fully remote and hybrid carry different expectations about desk provision, commuting, and office attendance, and the agreement should say which one it is. The workspace address is the field people are most surprised by and the one that does the most legal work: employer insurance, workplace-safety duties, and sometimes tax treatment all key off where work happens. The readiness checklist uses a deliberate mechanic — all four items must be ticked, because each is a condition, not a suggestion; a form that lets you skip the electrical-safety line is an agreement with a hole in it. Recording company equipment kept at home creates the asset trail that offboarding always wishes existed. The security acknowledgment and the drawn signature convert the whole page from a survey into an instrument.

What we left out. Workspace photo uploads, detailed ergonomic assessments, and expense-stipend elections. Photos age instantly and feel surveillant; proper ergonomic assessment is a specialist process the checklist points toward rather than replaces; and stipends are payroll configuration, not agreement content.

Who uses this. HR teams formalizing pandemic-era habits into defensible arrangements, companies whose insurers or auditors have started asking where employees work, and any employer in a jurisdiction where home-working conditions carry statutory duties.

Make it yours. Align the checklist items with your actual policy wording — then keep the tick-every-line requirement. Pair the form with the policy document itself linked from the intro. Renew annually: reopen the form each January, ask everyone to resubmit, and the responses table becomes a current register of who works where, with what, under which pattern — the exact artifact auditors ask for. Keep responses in the dashboard rather than forwarding them around; signed agreements deserve a tidy filing cabinet.

The register pays out at offboarding. The equipment field looks like bookkeeping until someone resigns — then it is the only list of what should come back, written by the employee themselves back when there was no incentive to under-report. Cross-check it against IT's asset inventory once a year; the gaps you find are laptops that moved houses without anyone updating either record. The address history matters the same way: an agreement citing a workspace the person left two moves ago is exactly the discrepancy an insurance assessor finds first, so treat every relocation as a trigger to re-collect the form, not as a footnote.

Frequently asked questions

Why must every checklist item be ticked?

Each line is a condition of the agreement, so the field requires all selections — an agreement with optional safety conditions would not protect either side.

What happens when someone moves house?

They resubmit the form with the new address — the ending asks for exactly that. Timestamped responses give you a clean history of where work happened when.

Is the drawn signature enough for this document?

For an internal agreement, a drawn signature attached to the dated response is a solid record of assent; check local requirements if you need statutory formality.

How do we run an annual re-signing?

Reopen or duplicate the form each year and ask everyone to resubmit. The current year’s responses become your live register of remote arrangements.