Terms & Conditions Generator
Generate free, customisable terms and conditions for your website, SaaS, or online store. Covers acceptable use, IP, disclaimers, and governing law.
Your Business
Features to Include
Fill in the form and click
Generate Terms & Conditions
⚠ This generates a starting template — it is not legal advice. Review with a qualified attorney before publishing, especially for SaaS, e-commerce, or marketplace businesses.
Disclaimer: Free tool provided “as is” by MonitorGiant. No warranty or liability for any data loss, security issues, or infrastructure problems arising from use of this tool. Results are for informational purposes only. · A Free Tool by MonitorGiant
How works
Answer a few questions about your business and generate a complete Terms & Conditions document in seconds. No sign-up required.
- 1
Enter your business details
Provide your website name, URL, contact email, and the type of service you run. These are embedded throughout the document.
- 2
Choose your service type
Select whether you run a blog, SaaS app, online store, or marketplace. Each type generates relevant legal clauses for your specific situation.
- 3
Select the features you offer
Check paid plans, free trials, user accounts, or any other features your service includes. Only relevant sections are generated.
- 4
Generate and download
Click Generate, then copy or download the document. Publish it at a dedicated URL (e.g. /terms) and link to it from your footer and sign-up page.
Everything runs in your browser. Your business details are never sent to any server.
Frequently asked questions — Terms and Conditions Generator
Are terms and conditions legally required?
Terms and conditions are not always legally mandatory, but they are strongly recommended for any website, app, or online service. They protect your business by limiting liability, defining user rights, and setting rules for using your service. For e-commerce, SaaS, and apps, they are effectively essential.
What is the difference between Terms of Service and Terms of Use?
Terms of Service (ToS), Terms of Use (ToU), and Terms & Conditions (T&C) are used interchangeably to mean the same thing — a legal agreement between your business and your users that governs use of your service.
Can I copy terms and conditions from another website?
Copying another company's T&C without permission is copyright infringement. Each business also has unique needs — terms for a blog differ significantly from those for a marketplace or SaaS app. Using a generator (like this one) or a lawyer-drafted template is safer and more appropriate.
Do terms and conditions protect me if a user sues?
Well-drafted terms can significantly limit your liability, require disputes to go through arbitration instead of court, and clarify the scope of your service. However, courts assess whether terms are enforceable on a case-by-case basis. A lawyer should review any terms used in high-stakes situations.
How often should I update my terms and conditions?
Review and update your terms whenever your service significantly changes, you add new features, or new laws come into force in your jurisdiction. Each update should include a new "Last updated" date. Notify existing users of material changes.
Where should terms and conditions be displayed on my website?
Create a dedicated page (e.g. /terms or /terms-of-service) and link to it in your footer, sign-up flow, and anywhere users create an account or make a purchase. Require users to acknowledge the terms at sign-up — a checkbox "I agree to the Terms & Conditions" is the standard approach.
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