Terms & Conditions Generator

Instantly create a standard legal agreement for your website to protect your intellectual property and limit your liability.

Business Information

This generator creates a standard liability template. If you sell physical products, handle subscriptions, or process payments, you should have an actual lawyer review your terms.

Generated Agreement

Fill out the form on the left and click "Generate" to see your custom legal agreement here.

What are Terms & Conditions?

If the Privacy Policy is a legal document protecting your users, the Terms and Conditions (T&C) is the legal document protecting you. Also known as Terms of Service or Terms of Use, this document acts as a legally binding contract between you (the website owner) and the visitors accessing your platform.

By simply visiting your website, users are agreeing to these rules. It sets the boundaries for what they are allowed to do on your site, and more importantly, it strictly limits your liability if something goes wrong.

Why do you absolutely need one?

Many new web developers skip writing Terms of Service because they assume their blog or utility tool is too small to get sued. This is a massive mistake. Here are the main reasons you need this document:

1. Preventing Abuse & Banning Users

If you run a forum, a SaaS app, or any site where users can create accounts, you need the legal right to ban them if they misbehave. If a user starts spamming your site, harassing other users, or trying to hack your server, your Terms of Service gives you the explicit legal authority to instantly terminate their account without them being able to sue you for "breach of contract."

2. Protecting Your Intellectual Property

You probably spent hundreds of hours designing your website, writing the code, and generating the content. Your T&C explicitly states that you own all the logos, articles, and code on the site. If a competitor copy-pastes your entire website and steals your branding, this document is the foundation you will use to send a DMCA Takedown Notice to their web host.

3. Limitation of Liability

This is the most important paragraph in the entire document. Our generator includes a strong "Limitation of Liability" clause. Imagine you run a fitness blog, and you post a workout routine. A user tries the routine, drops a dumbbell on their foot, and tries to sue you for their medical bills. Your Terms of Service explicitly states that the information is provided "as is" and that you cannot be held financially liable for any damages resulting from the use of your website.

Is this generator a replacement for a lawyer?

No. This tool generates a standard, boilerplate agreement that is fantastic for informational websites, blogs, portfolios, and basic free utility tools (like this one!). However, if you are running a complex eCommerce store, processing thousands of dollars in payments, or handling sensitive user data (like medical records), you absolutely must consult a real attorney to draft a custom agreement tailored to your exact business risks.