Free disclaimer generator
Write a website disclaimer or a EULA by answering a short form. Pick the clauses you need, from affiliate disclosure to the warranty and liability terms of a software licence, watch the document build as you type, and download it as HTML, Word, or PDF. Everything is assembled on your device, so your details never reach a server, and there is no sign-up.
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Disclaimer
Draft template - not legal advice. Have qualified counsel review before publishing.
1. Who this disclaimer covers
This disclaimer governs your use of [your-website.com], published by [Your site or business name] ("we", "us"). By reading or acting on anything on the site you accept it. If you do not accept it, stop using the site.
2. General information only
Everything on [your-website.com] is published for general information. It is not tailored to your situation, and we do not know your situation. You are responsible for what you do with it, and any decision you take after reading it is yours alone.
We make no warranty about the accuracy, completeness, or current state of anything published here. Content can go out of date the day after it is written, and we are under no obligation to update it.
3. External links
[your-website.com] links to sites we do not own or control. Those links are there because we thought the destination was useful at the time, not because we endorse everything on it. We do not check third-party sites for accuracy or safety, we are not responsible for their content or their privacy practices, and a link can rot or change hands without our knowing. Read the terms and the privacy policy of any site you land on.
4. Errors and omissions
We try to keep [your-website.com] accurate, and we still get things wrong. Information may contain errors, may be incomplete, or may be superseded by something newer. We are not liable for a loss you suffer because you relied on something here that turned out to be wrong, and we reserve the right to correct or remove content without notice. Tell us at [[email protected]] if you spot a mistake.
5. Limitation of liability
To the maximum extent the law allows, [Your site or business name] is not liable for any loss or damage arising from your use of [your-website.com] or your reliance on anything published on it, including indirect and consequential loss. Nothing in this disclaimer limits liability for death or personal injury caused by negligence, for fraud, or for anything else that cannot lawfully be limited.
6. Governing law
This disclaimer is governed by the law of [your country or state], and the courts there have jurisdiction over any dispute about it.
7. Changes and contact
We may update this disclaimer when what we publish changes. The effective date at the top tells you when the current version took effect, and using the site after a change means you accept the new version. Questions go to [[email protected]].
How the disclaimer generator works
Pick the document
A website disclaimer for a site, blog, or newsletter, or a EULA for software you licence to someone else. The form changes with the choice.
Choose the clauses
Tick affiliate disclosure and the FTC citation arrives. Tick medical advice and the clinician line arrives. On the EULA side, set the licence type, the restrictions, and the liability cap, and the agreement rewrites itself as you go.
Download and publish
Take the document as HTML for your site, Word for your lawyer, or PDF for your records. Nothing you typed ever left your device.
Free, private, and written to hold up
Most disclaimer generators put your business details through their servers, then paywall the download and hand back a watermarked sample. This one works differently, and the clauses it writes track what regulators actually ask for, including the FTC Endorsement Guides (16 CFR Part 255) for affiliate and sponsored content, and section 107 of the US Copyright Act for fair use:
100% in your browser
The form, the preview, and the HTML, Word, and PDF files are built by JavaScript on your device. Your business name, your email, and your answers are never uploaded.
No account, no email wall
There is nothing to sign up for and nothing to verify. Close the tab and the answers are gone from memory.
The whole document, free
You get every clause you ticked, not a preview with the useful half removed, and the download carries no watermark and no credit link back to us.
What the website disclaimer can include
- General and informational use, so nobody treats an article as advice for their situation.
- External links, covering sites you point at but do not control.
- Affiliate disclosure, citing the FTC Endorsement Guides.
- Advertising and sponsored content, separating paid placement from editorial.
- Testimonials and reviews, stating that one person's outcome is not a promise.
- Professional advice, with a separate paragraph for medical, legal, financial, or fitness content.
- Earnings and results, for any figure or case study you publish.
- Errors and omissions, plus the address people write to when they spot one.
- Fair use, for quoted or reproduced material.
- Views are my own, separating an author from an employer.
- Limitation of liability and the governing law, on every document.
Every document carries this line: "Draft template - not legal advice. Have qualified counsel review before publishing."
Using this page as a EULA generator
Switch the document type at the top of the form and the page becomes a EULA generator. A EULA is the licence a user accepts before installing your software, and it answers a different question from a disclaimer: not "what can you rely on" but "what may you do with this copy".
Website disclaimer
Limits reliance on what you publish. It is the page a reader lands on after a health article, an affiliate link, or an income claim, and it is linked from the footer of every page.
FTC Endorsement Guides, 16 CFR Part 255
EULA
Licenses a copy of your software. It covers the grant, permitted devices, restrictions, who owns the code, updates and support, open-source components, termination, the warranty disclaimer, and the liability cap.
Required by the App Store and Google Play if you replace their standard licence terms.
Terms and conditions
Governs how someone uses your site or service: accounts, payment, acceptable use, and how the relationship ends. Broader than a EULA and different from a disclaimer.
Generate terms and conditionsHandling personal data as well? That needs a separate notice, which you can draft with the privacy policy generator.
Built for publishers and software teams
The clauses you need depend on what you publish and what you licence, so the form scopes the document to how you actually operate. If you collect answers from readers or users, BlockSurvey covers that side with GDPR-ready surveys, where responses are encrypted before they reach a server.
Bloggers and creators
Cover affiliate links, sponsored posts, and reader comments in one page, which is what ad networks and affiliate programmes check for before they approve a site.
Health and finance writers
Publish the clinician or adviser line the topic demands, and state plainly that reading an article creates no professional relationship.
Course and coaching businesses
Put the earnings and testimonial clauses beside every case study, so a result someone achieved is never read as a result you promised.
Indie software developers
Ship a real EULA with an installer or an app build instead of pasting one from another product, with the licence type and the liability cap set to what you actually sell.
SaaS and app teams
Name your open-source components, say what happens to the licence when a subscription lapses, and answer the licensing questions a procurement review asks.
Agencies and freelancers
Draft a starting disclaimer for a client site in a few minutes, hand the Word file to their counsel, and publish the HTML once it comes back approved.
Collecting personal data through forms or surveys?
A disclaimer limits what people can hold you to. BlockSurvey limits what you hold in the first place: responses are encrypted on the respondent's device, so the server stores nothing readable. Collect with privacy-first, GDPR-ready surveys.
More free privacy tools
Browse all privacy toolsThese tools run in your browser because that is how we build everything. The same idea, applied to research: privacy-first surveys with end-to-end encryption.