Terms and Conditions Generator
Generate a clear Terms and Conditions page for your website using your business details, URL, and contact info, copy and customize.
Enter the Details
Generated Terms and Conditions
What this tool does
Terms and conditions are the rules people agree to when they use your site, the ground rules that protect your rights and set out what you will and will not be responsible for. This tool generates a set of terms from your details, ready to copy onto your site as a starting document.
How to use it
- Enter your Company Name, Website Name, Website URL, Country, State, and Email.
- Press Generate to build the document.
- Copy it and publish it on a Terms and Conditions page linked from your footer.
How it works
The tool places your details into a standard terms template covering the parts most sites need: acceptance of the terms, a licence and intellectual-property section protecting your content, the use of cookies, a limitation of liability, a general disclaimer, and a reference to your privacy policy. The output is one document framed around your company and location.
What terms do, and making them count
Think of terms and conditions as the agreement between you and everyone who uses your site. They do a few practical jobs at once: they set the acceptable ways people can use your site, they assert that your content and branding are yours, they limit what you can be held liable for, and they establish which country's or state's law governs any dispute. Unlike a privacy policy, terms are not usually required by law, but they are strongly recommended, because without them you have little footing to remove abusive users, protect your work, or cap your exposure.
The thing to get right is fit. A blog, an online store, and a web app all need different terms, an e-commerce site has to cover payments, refunds, and shipping, while a blog does not, so the generated document is a baseline to tailor, not a finished contract. Adjust it to match what your site actually offers, and for a business with real liability, paid services, or user-generated content, have a professional review it. The privacy policy and disclaimer generators handle the other two pages that usually sit alongside this one.
Things to keep in mind
- This is a starting template, not legal advice, and we are not a law firm. For paid services, an online store, or real liability, have a professional review it.
- Tailor it to your site. Different types of site need different terms, so edit the baseline to match what you actually offer.
- Link it from your footer, and where it matters, such as at sign-up or checkout, so users genuinely agree to it.
Questions people ask
Do I need terms and conditions?
They are not usually legally required, but they are strongly recommended. They let you set rules for using your site, protect your content, and limit your liability, which is hard to do without them.
What is the difference between terms and a privacy policy?
Terms are the rules for using your site, the agreement between you and your users. A privacy policy explains what data you collect and how you handle it. Most sites need both, and they do different jobs.
Is this legal advice?
No. It produces a template and general information. For your specific situation, consult a qualified legal professional.
Where should the terms go?
On their own page, linked from your footer, and surfaced at key moments like account sign-up or checkout, where users can accept them before proceeding.
Prabindra Tamang works in digital marketing and business development, with experience across campaigns, communications, and event execution. His strengths are in how digital content is presented, discovered, and made useful in practice. At Eon Tools, he reviews SEO tools.