Terms of Service Generator — Free Template
Fill in a short form and get ready-to-use terms of service for your website, SaaS, or app. Copy or download instantly — no account, no signup.
SaaS & Web Ready
Covers paid features, user accounts, user-generated content, and acceptable use.
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Fill in company name, website, feature flags — and click generate.
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Service Features
Key clauses every ToS should include
- Acceptance of terms — Clear statement that using the service constitutes agreement to the terms.
- Acceptable use — What users may not do: illegal activity, harassment, scraping, reverse engineering.
- Intellectual property — Who owns your content and what rights users have to it.
- Disclaimer of warranties — Service provided "as-is" without guarantees of uptime or accuracy.
- Limitation of liability — Cap on damages you owe if something goes wrong.
- Governing law — Which jurisdiction's laws apply and where disputes are resolved.
- Termination — Your right to suspend or terminate accounts that violate the terms.
Frequently asked questions
Does my website need terms of service?
While not always legally required, terms of service are strongly recommended for any website or app. They establish the rules users must follow, limit your liability, protect your intellectual property, and give you grounds to terminate accounts that violate the rules. For SaaS products, e-commerce sites, and any service with user accounts, terms of service are essential.
What is the difference between Terms of Service and Terms and Conditions?
Terms of Service (ToS), Terms and Conditions (T&C), and Terms of Use (ToU) are all names for the same type of document — a legal agreement between you and your users. The name choice is a matter of preference; the content and purpose are the same.
What should be in terms of service for a SaaS product?
SaaS terms should cover: subscription plans and pricing, payment terms and refund policy, acceptable use restrictions, service availability and uptime, data ownership and portability, account termination, intellectual property rights, limitation of liability, and governing law. The generator includes all of these with customization based on your feature set.
What is a limitation of liability clause?
A limitation of liability clause caps the maximum damages a user can claim from you. For example, limiting liability to the amount paid in the last 12 months. Without this clause, you could theoretically be liable for unlimited consequential damages. This is one of the most important clauses in any ToS.
Can I use these terms for a mobile app?
Yes, with modifications. Mobile apps have additional considerations: app store rules (Apple App Store, Google Play) have their own requirements for in-app purchases and subscriptions, and some app stores require specific language in ToS documents. Expand the template to cover app-store-specific provisions.
What governing law should I choose?
Choose the jurisdiction where your business is incorporated or where you are based. This determines which courts have jurisdiction over disputes and which laws apply. US companies typically choose their state of incorporation (Delaware is common). EU companies often choose their country of establishment.