| name | ai-agent-intervention-credit-and-abort-refund |
| description | Use when drafting the intervention-credit logic and the abort-and-refund clauses of an agent commercial structure. Provides the intervention-credit formula (per-resolution price reduced when intervention rate exceeds the agreed ceiling), the credit cap, the customer-facing monthly statement format, and the abort-and-refund triggers (irreversible-action incident at agency fault, intervention overshoot, regulator action, model-provider sustained outage). Pairs with `ai-agent-sla-and-credit-schedule` and `ai-agent-success-fee-and-outcome-pricing`. |
AI-Agent Intervention Credit and Abort-Refund
Acknowledgement: Shared by Peter Bamuhigire, techguypeter.com, +256 784 464178.
Use When
- The pricing pattern depends on the agent operating without human intervention beyond an agreed ceiling.
- The buyer's procurement team has asked: "what happens if your agent fails?"
- The proposal must show, contractually, that the buyer does not pay full price for tasks where the human did the work.
- The buyer wants an honest exit if the agent does not reach autonomy in a reasonable time.
- The agency wants to demonstrate skin-in-the-game without giving away margin.
Do Not Use When
- The pricing pattern is per-step or per-agent with included volume and no intervention sensitivity.
- The engagement is a fixed-fee build with no operational agent.
Required Inputs
- The intervention rate ceiling (from the autonomy ramp curve).
- The pricing pattern and the unit price.
- The supervisor cost per intervention.
- The credit cap the agency can absorb in a single month without breaching margin floor.
- The buyer's reporting cadence and the monthly statement format.
- The list of refund triggers the agency is willing to commit to.
- The pro-rata refund formula.
Workflow
- Set the intervention rate ceiling per the autonomy ramp curve. The ceiling should be a number the agent is expected to be inside of, with margin — not a stretch number.
- Write the intervention-credit formula — when monthly intervention rate exceeds the ceiling, the buyer receives a credit on the units billed for that month.
- Set the credit cap — typically 25 % of units billed per month, or the SLA-class cap for unified credits.
- Define the customer-facing visibility — the monthly statement shows tasks attempted, tasks completed without intervention, intervention rate, ceiling, credit applied, evidence-link to audit log.
- Write the abort-and-refund clause — the buyer's exit when the agent's autonomy ramp fails or when an irreversible-action incident occurs. Pro-rata refund of unused fees; no implementation-fee refund except where milestone-tied.
- Write the refund triggers explicitly — list each, with definition, evidence, and the calculation.
- Stress-test the intervention-credit exposure at three intervention rates (P50 / P90 / P99) against the cost stack — confirm margin floor holds.
- Output the Intervention Credit Clause and the Abort-and-Refund Clause for the financial proposal and the MSA.
The Intervention-Credit Formula
The default formula:
If the Intervention Rate in any calendar month exceeds the agreed Ceiling, the Buyer shall receive a credit equal to C % of the Unit Fees billed for that month for every P percentage points above the Ceiling, up to a maximum credit of M % of the monthly Unit Fees.
Typical calibration:
- Ceiling — 10 % (Silver), 8 % (Gold), 5 % (Platinum), softer in the first three months of the ramp.
- C — 1 % credit per 1 percentage-point breach (stepped variant: 2 % above 5 ppts; 5 % above 10 ppts).
- M — 25 % cap (Silver), 50 % cap (Gold), 100 % cap (Platinum).
The credit is the agency's commitment that the buyer carries no more supervision cost than agreed. It is not a discount; it is the price of the supervision overhead the buyer paid that month.
Worked Example
- Pricing: $0.85 per resolution. Ceiling 10 %. C = 1 %. M = 25 %.
- Month observed intervention rate = 18 %. Breach = 8 ppts. Credit = 8 % of monthly Unit Fees.
- Monthly Unit Fees = $68,000. Credit = $5,440. The buyer's net invoice is $62,560 plus base.
Customer-Facing Monthly Statement
Tenant: ACME
Period: April 2026
Tasks attempted: 80,000
Tasks completed without intervention: 65,600 (82.0 %)
Intervention rate observed: 18.0 %
Ceiling: 10.0 %
Breach: 8.0 ppts
Unit Fees billed: $68,000
Intervention Credit applied: $5,440 (8.0 % of Unit Fees)
Net Unit Fees: $62,560
Base Fee: $25,000
Total invoice: $87,560
Audit-log evidence-link: <agent-audit/2026-04>
The customer-facing visibility is the difference between "we honour our SLAs" and "we never seem to credit anyone".
The Abort-and-Refund Clause
The buyer may exit the engagement with pro-rata refund of unused prepaid fees on any of the following triggers:
| Trigger | Definition | Refund |
|---|
| Irreversible-Action Incident at Agency fault | An agent action with material adverse effect on the Buyer or a third party where the cause is determined by the named investigation process to be at the Agency's fault. | Pro-rata refund of unused subscription; implementation fees refunded only against unmet milestones. |
| Intervention overshoot, sustained | Monthly Intervention Rate above the Ceiling for sixty (60) consecutive days, after written notice and a thirty (30) day remediation window. | Pro-rata refund of unused subscription; intervention credits already issued retained by the Buyer; the engagement winds down. |
| Regulator Action | A regulator with jurisdiction over the Buyer or the Agent's actions issues an order to pause, restrict, or terminate the Agent. | Pro-rata refund; joint review; the Agency may credit the Buyer's next engagement against this refund. |
| Model-provider sustained outage | A named upstream Sub-Processor is unavailable for the relevant service for more than the agreed window (e.g. seven (7) consecutive days) and the Agency has not invoked the agreed fall-back. | Pro-rata refund of the affected window. |
| Audit-log breach | Audit-log completeness falls below the SLA floor for two consecutive months without remediation. | Pro-rata refund of the affected window plus a credit equal to ten per cent (10 %) of monthly fees. |
Refunds are pro-rata against unused subscription. Implementation fees are not refundable past defined milestones. The buyer's right to abort is in addition to any service credits already issued.
Pro-Rata Refund Formula
Refund = Prepaid Subscription Fees × (Unused Days in Period / Total Days in Period)
For multi-tenant engagements, refunds are computed per affected tenant. For multi-agent engagements, refunds are computed per affected agent persona unless the abort is engagement-wide.
Quality Standards
- Intervention rate ceiling is a number, not a phrase.
- The formula has a stated C, P, and M.
- The credit cap is named.
- The customer-facing monthly statement shape is shown.
- The abort triggers are named, defined, and have evidence.
- The pro-rata formula is explicit.
- Implementation-fee refundability is named.
- The audit log is the evidence source for every trigger.
- The agency has stress-tested the credit exposure against margin floor.
Anti-Patterns
- "We will work with the Buyer in good faith on intervention" — buyer reads no credit.
- Credit formula with no cap — margin floor blown.
- Credit applied invisibly on the invoice — buyer cannot see the SLA being honoured.
- Abort triggers vague ("material failure") — disputes endless.
- Refund clause without the pro-rata formula — disputes endless.
- Implementation-fee refundability silent — buyer assumes everything refunds.
- Audit log absent as evidence — disputes default to the louder party.
- Intervention rate ceiling set at the autonomy stretch target — agency credit-bleeds while the ramp is still climbing.
Outputs
- Intervention Credit Clause (drop-in).
- Abort-and-Refund Clause (drop-in).
- Refund Triggers Schedule.
- Pro-Rata Refund Formula.
- Customer-Facing Monthly Statement Template.
- Stress-test memo against margin floor.
References
../references/ai-agent-credit-and-refund-clauses.md — drop-in language.
../references/ai-agent-abandonment-and-refund-policy-template.md — customer-facing policy.
../references/ai-agent-pricing-models-reference.md — pattern-by-pattern intervention credit examples.
../references/ai-agent-sla-exhibit-template.md — SLA exhibit alignment.
../ai-agent-sla-and-credit-schedule/SKILL.md — SLA class and credit cap consistency.
../ai-agent-pricing-and-packaging-proposal/SKILL.md — patterns.
../ai-agent-business-case-and-roi/SKILL.md — downside scenario sizing.