Where either party to an English law master service agreement is overseas, the MSA will commonly require a process agent. Service framework relationships run for years, operate through formal notices and can end in disputes about performance or termination, all of which depend on valid service at a UK address.
Frameworks magnify the service problem
An MSA is not one contract but a family: the framework plus every statement of work, order and change notice issued under it. Termination rights, service credits and step in mechanics all run on notice provisions. When the supplier is in one jurisdiction and the customer in another, both sides benefit from knowing exactly where documents can be served, so the boilerplate names an agent for each overseas party.
Technology, outsourcing and services deals
We see the requirement most in technology and outsourcing arrangements, managed services, logistics and facilities contracts where an overseas provider serves UK customers, and increasingly where UK suppliers contract with overseas enterprise customers under English law. Whichever side you sit on, the appointment is the same: one order form, cover from £125 per year, confirmation usually within 24 hours.
Scoping the appointment
The clean approach is for the appointment to name the MSA, with documents issued under it covered as documents arising in connection with the named agreement. Where a relationship involves genuinely separate contracts, multi agreement cover adds £30 for a second and £60 for three or more. Our answer on covering multiple agreements sets out how groups structure this.