Terms and conditions generator
Build terms of service for a website, app, SaaS, or store — free, in your browser.
Runs 100% in your browserNot legal advice. This produces a template from your answers. Whether each clause is enforceable depends on your jurisdiction — have a lawyer review it before you rely on it.
How to generate terms and conditions
- Describe your service. Enter your name, URL, and contact email, and choose whether it is a website, app, SaaS, or store.
- Tick what applies. Add clauses for accounts, payments, user content, the minimum age, and your governing law.
- Copy or download. The terms update live. Copy them as HTML, Markdown, or text, or download a file.
About terms and conditions
Your terms and conditions — also called terms of service or terms of use — are the contract between you and the people who use your site or app. They set out who may use it, what they may and may not do, who owns the content, how payments and refunds work, and the limits of your liability if something goes wrong. Clear terms protect you and set expectations for users, which is why app stores, payment processors, and ad networks often require them. This generator assembles standard clauses based on your service type — a website, a mobile app, a SaaS product, or an online store — and the options you tick. Treat it as a well-structured first draft: liability limits, refund rules, and dispute clauses are exactly the parts whose enforceability varies by country, so a legal review is worth it before you publish. Add a privacy policy to explain how you handle personal data.
Frequently asked questions
- Yes. It runs entirely in your browser with no account and no watermark. Copy or download the result and use it as you wish.
- They are a template assembled from your answers, provided for general information only — not legal advice. Whether a clause (for example a liability limit) is enforceable depends on your jurisdiction, so have a lawyer review the document before you rely on it.
- "Terms and conditions", "terms of service", and "terms of use" are interchangeable names for the rules of using your website or app. An EULA is specifically a software licence. This generator produces general terms suitable for a website, app, SaaS, or online store.
- Yes. Pick the service type and tick options like user accounts, paid features, and user-generated content, and the relevant clauses (payments and refunds, content licence, orders and delivery) are added.
- No. The document is built locally in your browser; nothing you type is sent to a server or stored.