Free AI Terms of Service & Conditions Generator
Free terms of service and T&C, no signup
A free AI terms of service generator turns a short description of your website, app, SaaS, or store into a clean, ready-to-use Terms of Service in minutes, without creating an account. You tell Marco what your business is and how it works, and he drafts a complete agreement with the standard sections: acceptance of the terms, a description of the service, accounts, acceptable use, payment and subscriptions, intellectual property, disclaimers, limitation of liability, termination, and governing law, with refund or arbitration clauses whenever you need them. He writes in plain language you can actually read, fills in clear [brackets] for anything he does not know, and adjusts clauses, adds a refund policy, or drafts matching Terms & Conditions on request. He is honest about the limit: this is a solid starting template, not legal advice, and a qualified lawyer should review it before you publish, because rules vary by country and by business. There is no signup and no credit card to start, and when a one-off agreement is not enough, the same assistant can become a full AI employee that helps keep your legal docs current as your business changes.
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How it works
- Describe your site or app: What your business is, how it works, whether it's paid, and your contact email. A line or two is enough.
- Get ready-to-paste terms: A clean Terms of Service with the standard sections, plus refund, subscription, or disclaimer clauses on request.
- Adjust, then have it reviewed: Ask for a refund policy, arbitration, app framing, or a matching privacy policy. Then fill the brackets and have a lawyer review it before you publish.
Why your site needs terms of service
Your shield terms of service set the rules of using your product and are where you place disclaimers, liability limits, and acceptable-use rules that protect your business
Required payment platforms and app stores expect clear terms before you charge customers, and auto-renewal disclosure is legally required in several US states and the EU
$0 to draft as many terms of service and terms & conditions as you want, with no signup and no credit card
Minutes from a one-line description of your site or app to a clean, ready-to-paste terms agreement
How the ways to get terms of service compare
| Option | No signup | Coverage | Cost | Speed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Copying another site's terms | n/a | Risky, may not fit you | Free | Fast |
| Hiring a lawyer to draft them | n/a | Tailored | Expensive | Days |
| Paid terms generators | Rarely | Good, behind a paywall | Subscription | Minutes |
| This free AI generator | Yes | Standard sections, refund and subscription clauses | Free | Minutes |
Terms of service you can actually read and use
Most terms agreements are either copied off another site and a poor fit, or written in dense legalese nobody reads. This is built to do the opposite: a complete terms agreement in plain language, with clear headings and the standard sections, that you can paste onto your site and understand.
You describe your business in a line, and the draft comes back covering acceptance, the service, accounts, acceptable use, payment, intellectual property, disclaimers, liability, termination, and governing law. Anything Marco does not know shows up as a clear bracket to fill in, so you start from a working document, not a blank page.
Built around the sections terms need
A usable Terms of Service covers a known set of things: how a user accepts the terms, what the service is, account and eligibility rules, acceptable use, payment and subscription terms if you charge, intellectual property and the license you grant, disclaimers, limitation of liability, termination, and the governing law. Miss one and it reads incomplete.
The generator is tuned for exactly that set, and it adapts to your business. Tell it you run a paid SaaS and it adds subscription, auto-renewal, and cancellation terms. Tell it you sell physical goods and it adds a refund and returns policy. Tell it you distribute software and it frames a EULA instead of hosted-service terms.
Honest about what it is, and what it is not
Plenty of generators hand you a confident document and let you believe you are fully protected. This one is upfront: every first draft ends with a plain note that it is a solid starting template, not legal advice, and that a qualified lawyer should review it before you publish.
That honesty is the point. The clauses that matter most, disclaimers, liability limits, and arbitration, are heavily regulated and only partly enforceable depending on where your users are, so no free tool can promise your terms will hold up on their own. What it can do is give you a strong, well-structured starting point and explain each part, so the lawyer review is faster and cheaper.
How it compares to other terms generators
Plenty of terms and conditions generators are quick, but they either lock the useful parts behind a subscription or spit out a fixed template you cannot question. You paste it and hope it fits, with no way to ask what a clause means or adjust it for your business.
This one gives you a complete draft for free, in plain language, and it talks back. Ask it to add a refund policy, switch from a website to an app, add subscription terms, or draft a matching privacy policy, and it does. No signup to start, and unlike a one-off tool, it does not stop at the document. The same assistant can carry on as a real AI employee once you are ready.
From terms to keeping all your legal docs handled
Terms of service are not a set-and-forget file. The moment you launch a paid plan, change your pricing, add user-generated content, or open up to new markets, the terms need to keep up, and that is the part most founders quietly let go stale.
Here the assistant who drafted them can stay on. Once you sign up, the same person becomes part of a team of AI employees in your workspace, helping keep your terms and privacy policy current as the business changes, drafting new clauses as you launch features and plans, and flagging when something needs a fresh lawyer review, so your legal docs stay handled instead of frozen on day one.
The short version
- A free AI terms of service generator turns a one-line description of your site or app into a clean, ready-to-paste terms agreement in minutes, with no account and no card to start.
- Complete terms cover acceptance, the service, accounts, acceptable use, payment and subscriptions, intellectual property, disclaimers, liability, termination, and governing law, with refund and arbitration clauses on request.
- This is a solid starting template, not legal advice. Requirements vary by country and by business, so have a qualified lawyer review it before you publish, especially the liability and disclaimer clauses.
- Most products need both terms and a privacy policy. The same assistant drafts a matching privacy policy, and can become a full AI employee that keeps your legal docs current as the business changes.
What it does
- A complete, ready-to-paste Terms of Service from a one-line description, in minutes
- Standard sections covered: acceptance, the service, accounts, acceptable use, IP, disclaimers, liability, termination, governing law
- Subscription, auto-renewal, and cancellation terms for paid products, added on request
- Refund and returns policy clauses for stores and SaaS, added on request
- Acceptable-use policy, disclaimer, and arbitration clauses when you need them
- EULA framing for downloadable apps and software, or hosted-service terms for SaaS
- Works for a website, app, SaaS, online store, or marketplace, in plain readable language
- Honest by design: flags that it's a starting template, not legal advice, with no signup to start
Who it is for
- Getting terms of service live before you launch a website or SaaS
- Adding clear subscription and auto-renewal terms before you start charging
- Drafting a refund and returns policy for an online store
- Adding an acceptable-use policy and disclaimer to an existing site
- A founder or indie maker who needs a solid first draft before paying a lawyer to review it
Good to know
- This is a solid starting template, not legal advice. Have a qualified lawyer review and adapt it before you publish.
- Disclaimers, liability limits, and arbitration clauses are heavily regulated and only partly enforceable depending on jurisdiction, so review matters most there.
- It drafts and explains the documents, but a free chat cannot host, publish, or certify that your terms are enforceable. That starts when you sign up.
- The more you describe your business, how it charges, and your jurisdiction, the more accurate the draft. It will not keep your documents forever unless you save them with your email.
Questions people ask about terms of service
Short, direct answers to the questions people search for most when they need terms of service or terms and conditions for a site or app.
How do I write terms of service for my website?
Cover how users accept the terms, what your service is, account and eligibility rules, acceptable use, payment and subscription terms if you charge, intellectual property, disclaimers, limitation of liability, termination, and the governing law. Write it in plain language with clear headings. This free generator drafts all of that from a one-line description of your site, with clear brackets for anything to fill in, then you have a lawyer review it before publishing.
Is this terms of service generator free?
Yes. You can draft as many terms of service and terms & conditions as you want with no signup and no credit card. Because the document comes from an AI legal assistant rather than a locked template, you can keep steering, add a refund policy, fold in subscription terms, switch from a website to an app, until it fits. After a number of messages it may ask for your email to save your documents and keep going.
What is the difference between terms of service and a privacy policy?
Terms of service set the rules for using your product: acceptance, acceptable use, payment, liability, and termination. A privacy policy covers how you collect and handle personal data. They are separate documents and most products need both. This tool focuses on your terms, and Marco can draft a matching privacy policy on request, or use the dedicated privacy policy generator.
Are terms of service legally required?
Terms of service are not always strictly required by law the way a privacy policy often is, but they are how you set the rules of using your product, disclaim warranties, limit liability, and protect your business, so almost every site, app, and store should have them. If you charge customers, clear payment and auto-renewal terms are expected by payment platforms and required in several US states and the EU. Confirm your specific obligations with a qualified lawyer.
Is this legal advice, and will the terms hold up?
No, this is not legal advice, and generated terms are not automatically enforceable. They are a solid, well-structured starting template that covers the standard sections, but whether a clause holds up depends on your exact business, your country, and how it is written. Always have a qualified lawyer review and adapt the document before you publish it, especially the disclaimer, liability, and arbitration sections, and never treat any free generator's output as guaranteed enforceable on its own.
Can it add subscription and auto-renewal terms?
Yes, on request. If you charge a recurring fee, ask and it adds payment, billing cycle, auto-renewal, cancellation, refund, and price-change wording. Auto-renewal disclosure is legally required in several US states and the EU, so it calls that out clearly. Have a lawyer confirm the wording fits the states and countries your customers are in.
Can it write a refund policy too?
Yes. Ask and it drafts a refund and cancellation section: the refund window, what qualifies, how to request one, and how cancellation works. For consumers in the EU and UK there is often a statutory right of withdrawal, so it notes that when relevant. Tell it whether you offer refunds, store credit, or no refunds, and it writes the policy to match.
What is a EULA, and can it generate one?
A EULA, or End User License Agreement, governs the license to use software specifically, and is common for downloadable apps and desktop software, where Terms of Service usually governs a hosted online service. Tell the generator you distribute software rather than run a hosted service and it frames a EULA: the license grant, restrictions, ownership, updates, and termination.
Can I use these terms for my mobile app?
Yes. Tell it you are building an app and it frames the terms for app use: the license to use the app, in-app purchases and subscriptions, acceptable use, and the relationship with the app store's own terms. Both the Apple App Store and Google Play expect clear terms and payment rules, so an app-specific draft is a common use. Have a lawyer confirm it matches how your app actually works.
Should I copy terms of service from another website?
It is risky. Another site's terms describe their service, their pricing, their liability stance, and their jurisdiction, not yours, so copying them can leave you agreeing to clauses that do not fit, or missing ones you need. A far safer start is a draft built around your own business, like this one generates, that you then fill in and have a lawyer review before you publish.
Frequently asked questions
Is it really free?
Yes. You can draft terms of service and terms & conditions right now with no signup and no credit card. After a number of messages we may ask for your email to save your documents and keep going.
Do I need to sign up?
No. Just describe your site or app and how it works, and get a draft immediately. Email is optional and only used to save your documents and unlock more messages.
Is this legal advice?
No. Marco drafts a solid starting template and explains each part, but this is not legal advice and the document is not automatically enforceable. Requirements vary by country and by business, so have a qualified lawyer review and adapt it before you publish.
Will the terms actually protect my business?
They include the standard disclaimer, liability, and acceptable-use sections that businesses rely on, which gets you most of the way, but how much they protect you depends on your jurisdiction and how the clauses are written. Treat the draft as a strong starting point and have a lawyer confirm it before relying on it.
Does it write a matching privacy policy too?
Yes. Ask and it drafts a matching privacy policy alongside your terms, or you can use the dedicated privacy policy generator. Most products need both documents, so it is a common next step.
Can I add subscription, refund, or arbitration clauses?
Yes. Tell it you charge a subscription, offer or refuse refunds, or want an arbitration clause, and the next draft folds those sections in, with auto-renewal disclosure where it is required.
Does it work for an app, a SaaS, or a store?
Any of them. Tell it whether you run a website, a mobile app, a SaaS, an online store, or distribute software, and it frames the terms, and whether it is a Terms of Service or a EULA, to match. You can switch between them anytime and it re-drafts.
What language can I use?
Any. Marco drafts your terms in whatever language you write in, and can tailor the document to a specific market or jurisdiction if you ask.
Can it host or publish the terms on my site?
Not in this free chat, where it drafts and explains the documents only. You paste the draft onto your own site after a lawyer review. Once you sign up, the same assistant becomes your employee and can help keep your legal docs current as your business changes.
Is my information kept private?
Yes. Your conversation is not shared with anyone, not sold, and not used to train AI models. It is handled securely. If you add your email, we use it only to save your documents so you can come back to them later.
Does it remember the documents it drafted?
Within a session it builds on what you have already seen. To keep your documents across visits, save them with your email. If you sign up to keep going, the conversation comes with you into your workspace.
What if I want my legal docs kept up to date for me?
Terms of service go stale the moment your business changes. When a one-off draft is not enough, you do not have to maintain it alone. You can hire a team of AI employees to help keep your terms and privacy policy current as you add plans and grow, and start for free.