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Vault > Location & Assets > 🚘 Picture Car Agreement Guide
Using a car in your film

October 20, 2025

Legal Guide

🚘 Picture Car Agreement Guide

Thoolie Team

Protecting Vehicles (and Your Production) Like a Pro

In every great car scene β€” from Drive to Mad Max: Fury Road β€” there’s more than choreography and horsepower at play. Behind the scenes, there’s paperwork ensuring every tire squeal and fender dent is covered legally.

For indie filmmakers, those documents are the difference between a successful shoot and a financial disaster. Whether you’re borrowing a neighbor’s convertible or renting a fleet of vintage Cadillacs, a Picture Car Agreement protects both your production and the car owner.

This guide breaks down the key clauses you need to include, why they matter, and how to attach a clean Exhibit A that lists every vehicle on your project.

🎬 Why Picture Car Clauses Matter

Cars may look glamorous on camera, but they’re legal minefields in production. A simple scratch can trigger a five-figure claim. A vague contract can void insurance coverage. And an unlisted driver can shut down your set.

A strong Picture Car Agreement doesn’t just allocate responsibility β€” it builds trust. It tells owners you’re a professional, and it gives your crew clear rules about what can (and can’t) happen on set.

Even if you’re not dealing with million-dollar vehicles, having the right clauses in place saves time, money, and relationships β€” and that’s what keeps your shoot moving.

🧾 Core Clauses You Can’t Skip

1. Vehicle Description & Condition

Always start by identifying the car with precision β€” make, model, color, year, license plate, and VIN. Take photos before production begins, documenting every scratch and dent. That β€œbefore” gallery can prevent endless debates about whether damage occurred on set or long before.

2. Usage & Restrictions

Define exactly what the car will be used for β€” parked shots, driven scenes, or stunts. If it’s being driven, list who’s allowed behind the wheel. A β€œno stunts or high-speed maneuvers” line can save you from insurance denial later.

3. Compensation

Payment can be a flat fee, daily rate, or based on screen time. If the vehicle requires detailing or prep (like wrapping or aging), note who pays for it. Clarity on fuel, transport, and cleaning costs keeps surprises out of post.

4. Insurance & Liability

This is the heart of the contract. State which policy covers the car during filming, and ensure both the owner and production are named as additional insureds. Include a clause for liability limits and a waiver of subrogation β€” the legal tool that prevents insurance companies from suing each other if something goes wrong.

5. Maintenance & Repairs

Cars get used hard on set β€” even in static scenes. Specify who handles mechanical issues and what happens if the car breaks down during production. Productions often agree to β€œreturn in equal or better condition” and cover repairs for any damage directly caused by filming.

6. Restoration & Return

If you wrap, repaint, or modify the car for a scene, document how and when it will be restored. β€œReturn to pre-production condition” should be paired with a deadline and who pays for restoration work.

7. Ownership & Title

If the production is purchasing or temporarily taking title to a vehicle, note when ownership transfers and how it reverts after filming. Always identify the official titleholder β€” it protects against unpaid DMV renewals or insurance confusion later.

8. Credits & Promotion

Some owners may request a β€œVehicle Provided by…” credit or permission to reference the film in their own marketing. Include this in writing. It costs nothing and builds goodwill β€” especially when working with collectors or niche dealerships.

πŸŽ₯ Advanced Clauses for Filmmakers

Stunts & Damage Clauses

For action scenes, separate β€œhero” cars (used for principal photography) from β€œstunt” cars (used for destruction or rig work). Each should have its own condition report and replacement value. If the vehicle is intentionally destroyed, clarify who keeps salvageable parts and how payment will be calculated.

Insurance Riders

Include β€œadditional insured” and β€œloss payee” designations on the certificate of insurance, and specify who files claims if damage occurs. A one-page rider attached to the main contract can handle these details cleanly.

Multi-Car Productions

When working with several vehicles, attach an Exhibit A listing each car. This allows you to use one master agreement instead of separate contracts β€” a lifesaver for tight schedules and limited crew.

Promotional Use & Likeness Rights

If the car’s likeness appears in marketing, merch, or key art, the owner’s permission may be required. This is common with collector cars or branded vehicles (like a Tesla or vintage Mustang). Define this early to avoid future disputes.

πŸ“‹ How to Build Your Exhibit A

Your Exhibit A functions as an appendix that itemizes every car used under the agreement. It should read like an inventory sheet β€” clear enough that anyone on the production can reference it quickly.

Here’s a simple sample layout:

VehicleMake / Model / YearVIN / PlateColor / DescriptionUsage TypeDesignated DriverReplacement ValueNotes
Car #1Ford Mustang 19678R03C123456Cherry Red ConvertibleHero CarJohn Smith$45,000Main character car
Car #2Toyota Camry 20124T1BF1FK1CU123456Silver SedanBackground TrafficProduction Driver #3$7,000Used for city scene
Car #3Chevy Impala 19741Q87T4N123456Matte BlackStunt CarStunt Coordinator$20,000Destroys in Act 3

When listing multiple cars, ensure each entry matches the insurance schedule and production log. Always keep the Exhibit A signed and dated by both parties.

Downloads

Insider Members can download the Picture Car Agreement Clause Guide (PDF) and our Exhibit A Sample Template.

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🎬 Key Takeaway

Every picture car is a piece of your film β€” and a piece of someone’s property.
The more detail you put into your paperwork, the smoother your shoot will go.

Protect your story, protect your partners, and drive your production forward with confidence.

FAQ

What is a Picture Car Agreement?

A Picture Car Agreement is a contract between a film production and a vehicle owner that defines how the car will be used, insured, and returned after filming.

Do indie filmmakers need Picture Car Agreements?

Yes. Even low-budget or short film productions should use them to avoid liability and clarify insurance coverage.

Can multiple cars be covered under one contract?

Yes, using an Exhibit A attachment that lists each vehicle with details like VIN, color, and use type.

What happens if the car is damaged on set?

The Picture Car Agreement determines who’s responsible and how compensation or insurance claims are handled.

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