If you’re negotiating your next Film & TV deal, understanding the difference between backend points and guild residuals could mean the difference between a steady income stream and waiting for profits that may never materialize. This guide breaks down exactly what you need to know—and what questions to ask—before signing.
Backend points are a distinct and individually negotiated form of compensation completely separate from the guild-mandated residuals you receive for the reuse of your work. While both are forms of ongoing payment, they operate on fundamentally different principles.
The most crucial concept to understand is that backend points are not guaranteed money. They are a speculative gamble on a project’s success, whereas guild residuals are a contractual certainty if your work is reused.
Guild Residuals are standardized payments for the reuse of a credited work, such as for TV reruns, home video sales, or streaming distribution. These payments are required by collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) from guilds like SAG-AFTRA, the DGA, the WGA, IATSE, and AMF. Payments begin when your work airs on new platforms or markets. Critically, residuals are paid out regardless of whether the film or show is profitable. They are based on complex formulas tied to factors like the distribution market and your initial salary. For example, when your theatrical film moves to streaming, you receive residuals regardless of the film’s profitability.
Backend Points are a form of profit participation. This is a percentage of a project’s net or gross profits that is highly negotiated on an individual, contractual basis. This income is only paid if a project becomes profitable enough to cover all its costs and pay back its investors. Backend points represent your bet on a project’s success.
Here’s a simple breakdown of the key differences:
High-profile talent might negotiate for backend points to share in the massive upside of a blockbuster, sometimes taking a smaller upfront fee in exchange. In the world of low to micro-budget independent films, however, points are often the main currency a producer has to compensate key team members for working at discounted rates.
Understanding how this compensation flows is critical. The profits are typically paid out to participants only after a series of other parties are paid first. This payment order is often called the “waterfall.” Generally, net profits are paid out only after:
The single most important factor in any backend deal is the definition of “profit.”
A backend offer can be a valuable incentive, but a poorly defined one is worth less than the paper it’s written on. Before you agree to “work for points,” you and your legal counsel must get clarity on the following:
The rise of streaming giants like Netflix, Amazon, and Apple has fundamentally altered the backend landscape. Historically, a show could become profitable years after its initial run through syndication and international sales, generating long-term income for participants.
Today, vertically integrated streamers often produce, distribute, and exhibit content in-house, retaining global rights and eliminating traditional syndication pathways. This has led to:
As a result, many now consider traditional backend points an antiquated concept for projects made under a global streamer.
Separate from residuals and backend points are foreign royalties or levies. These are payments mandated by the laws of other countries to compensate creators for things like private copying or cable retransmission of their work. These fees are collected by local societies and distributed to creators, meaning you could receive a check for foreign levies years after a project was released.
Guild agreements and individual film and television production contracts handle the issue of new, not yet invented media platforms through a combination of forward-looking contract language, ongoing negotiations, and specific clauses that define and govern new media.
Independent Film:
Streaming Series:
Low-Budget Production:
Reject deals that:
Backend points can be a powerful tool for wealth creation or a frustratingly empty promise. The difference often comes down to the fine print in your contract. An offer of “points” is not the end of a negotiation; it’s the beginning. Our NYC Entertainment Attorneys understand industry-standard definitions.
Before you sign any agreement involving profit participation, it is vital to have it reviewed by an experienced New York entertainment lawyer. At Rodriques Law, PLLC, we help our clients navigate these complex deals, ensuring the terms are clearly defined, fair, and structured to maximize your chances of seeing a real return on your creative investment.
The $5 Million Question: Is your backend deal actually worth anything? Most aren’t. Our contract review catches the red flags that cost creators millions. One clause can make the difference between backend that pays and points that don’t.
Contact us today to ensure your contract protects your interests.