Using the wrong license for a client project can get you — and your client — into serious legal trouble. This guide explains exactly what a commercial license means for HTML templates, what's allowed and what's not, and how to protect yourself before you start building.
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A commercial license is a legal agreement that gives you the right to use someone else's creative work — in this case, an HTML CSS JavaScript template — for profit-generating activities.
Without a commercial license, you can legally use a template only for personal projects: your own portfolio, a hobby site, or a side project you don't charge for. The moment a client pays you to build something using a template, you need a commercial license — otherwise, you're infringing on the template author's copyright.
This is not a technicality. Copyright law applies to digital files just like it applies to music, fonts, and photography. Using a template without the correct license is illegal in most countries, regardless of whether the template was free or paid.
⚠️ Common Misconception
Many freelancers assume that paying for a template automatically gives them commercial rights. It doesn't. You're buying a license to use the template — the specific rights depend entirely on what the license says, not just the price.
Here's a plain-English breakdown of what a full commercial license allows — and what it doesn't:
💡 Key Rule
The simplest way to think about it: you can use the template to build things (websites, client projects, businesses). You just can't sell the template itself or give others access to the raw files.
Let's go through common freelancer situations and whether they're allowed under a standard commercial license:
You customize an agency template with the restaurant's menu, photos, and contact info. You charge $1,200 for the project and hand the client the finished website files.
You use a SaaS template as the marketing page for your own subscription product. The product generates recurring revenue.
The client asks for the source files so their developer can make future edits. You zip everything up and hand it over.
You take a template from your bundle, modify the colors and fonts, and list it on Themeforest as your own product for $59.
Someone in a developer group asks where to get good templates. You post your download link so they can access the bundle.
You have a one-time license and build dozens of client websites using different templates from the bundle over multiple years.
Free HTML templates are everywhere — and most freelancers use them for client work without thinking twice. This is one of the most common and costly mistakes in freelancing.
Here's the reality:
⚠️ Real Risk
If a template author discovers you used their work commercially without a proper license, they can issue a DMCA takedown on your client's website — taking it offline instantly. Your client will hold you responsible. A $35 commercial license is infinitely cheaper than the legal and business damage this causes.
You can use the template for your own non-commercial projects only. Not allowed for client work, not allowed if the project generates revenue. Common on free template sites.
You can use the template for one commercial project only. If you want to use it again for another client, you need to buy again. Common on Themeforest — one license per project.
Allows unlimited commercial projects. Usually more expensive (Themeforest charges $250+ for extended licenses). This is what serious freelancers actually need but rarely buy because of the price.
The best scenario for freelancers: one purchase, unlimited commercial projects, forever. This is what UiXDraft provides — 180+ templates, one price ($35), unlimited client projects for life.
📌 Bottom Line on Licenses
For freelancers who build multiple client websites, an unlimited commercial license is the only model that makes financial sense. Pay once, build unlimited projects, never worry about license counts again.
| Provider | Templates Included | Commercial Use | Unlimited Projects | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free template sites | Varies | ✗ Usually not | ✗ | $0 |
| Themeforest (regular) | 1 per purchase | ✓ 1 project | ✗ Pay per project | $59–$99 |
| Themeforest (extended) | 1 per purchase | ✓ Unlimited | ✓ | $250–$400 |
| Envato Elements | Thousands | ✓ Per project | ✗ Re-register each | $16.50/mo |
| UiXDraft | 180+ | ✓ Unlimited | ✓ Forever | $35 once |
⚖️ The Safest Commercial License for Freelancers
Use every template on unlimited client projects. No per-project fees, no subscriptions, no attribution required. Buy once — build forever.
30-day money-back guarantee · Instant download · No subscription
Before using any HTML template for a client project, run through this checklist:
💡 Best Practice
Save a copy of the license document when you purchase any template. If a copyright dispute ever arises — even years later — having the license on file proves you were authorized to use the work.
For freelancers building client websites, the commercial license question has one right answer: get an unlimited commercial license and stop worrying about it forever.
Paying $59 per template every time you take a new client project is expensive and unsustainable. Subscriptions drain your margin every month. Free templates put you at legal risk every time you ship something.
The smart move is what thousands of professional freelancers do: buy a one-time bundle with an unlimited commercial license, cover every future project, and put your mental energy into building great websites — not tracking license counts.
At $35 for 180+ templates with full commercial rights, UiXDraft is the only bundle that makes this decision simple.
🔒 Build With Full Legal Protection
180+ professional HTML/CSS/JS templates. Unlimited commercial projects. No attribution. No subscription. No legal risk. $35 one-time payment.
🔒 Secure checkout via PayPal · Instant download · 30-day money-back guarantee
A commercial license lets you use an HTML template to build websites for paying clients, charge your full rate, and deliver the site without attribution or royalties. UiXDraft's $35 bundle includes commercial rights for all 180+ templates.
Yes. UiXDraft's commercial license covers unlimited client projects — you can charge whatever you want for the work and deliver the final site without crediting the template. The only restriction is reselling the templates themselves.
Some do (MIT-licensed ones), some don't. The problem is inconsistency — verifying each free template's license takes time, and mistakes create legal exposure. Premium bundles like UiXDraft ($35 / 180+ templates) resolve this with one clear license.
Unlimited. UiXDraft's commercial license has no per-project or per-client cap. One $35 payment covers every client project you do — there are no recurring fees tied to volume or usage.
UiXDraft Template Bundle
180+ HTML CSS JS Templates — $35 One-Time
Commercial license · Instant download · No subscription
Get the Bundle — $35