EULA Generator

Draft an End User Licence Agreement that actually fits your software — desktop, mobile, API, or SaaS. Covers the licence grant, permitted uses, restrictions, updates, termination, and warranty disclaimers.

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What's included in every draft

Quality verification

Every document is verified for accuracy, completeness, and jurisdiction-specific requirements before delivery.

Jurisdiction-aware

180 jurisdictions including GDPR, UK GDPR, CCPA/CPRA, LGPD, PIPL, PDPA, PIPEDA, POPIA.

120+ languages

Translate policies into the languages your users actually read, with terminology tuned to local law.

Who needs this policy

Desktop software with installers

Windows and macOS installers typically require users to accept an EULA before the install proceeds — the draft covers seat counts, activation, and update mechanics.

Mobile apps on iOS and Android

Publishers supplying their own EULA (instead of relying on the Apple default) can tailor licence scope, in-app-purchase terms, and update rules to their product.

SaaS products with downloadable components

Desktop agents, browser extensions, or mobile companions shipped alongside a SaaS need licence terms distinct from the service-level terms of service.

API and SDK distributions

SDKs, client libraries, and API toolkits need EULA-style licence grants that cover permitted integrations, redistribution, and reverse-engineering restrictions.

Jurisdiction coverage

US software licensing (UCITA and state contract law)

This document is designed to align with prevailing US software-licensing practice, including enforceable click-wrap acceptance, warranty disclaimers under UCC Article 2 analogues, and limitation-of-liability language tested by US courts.

EU software protection and consumer rights

The PolicifyAI system outputs licence language mindful of Directive 2009/24/EC (legal protection of computer programs), including permitted back-up copies and decompilation for interoperability, plus the consumer-rights carve-outs required for EU end users.

UK software licensing and CRA 2015

Compliance templates keep the statutory rights under the Consumer Rights Act 2015 for digital content — satisfactory quality, fitness for purpose, and as-described — intact where the end user is a consumer.

Apple App Store and Google Play requirements

Software-generated output references the minimum EULA terms Apple and Google require, including the platform carve-outs, third-party beneficiary clauses, and the standard Apple Licensed Application EULA fallback.

US export control (EAR) and sanctions

The draft includes export-control and sanctions-compliance provisions aligned with the US Export Administration Regulations and OFAC sanctions lists, including restricted-country and restricted-party acknowledgements.

How it works in five minutes

  1. Describe the software and distribution model

    Answer questions about platform, installation model, pricing, and whether users are consumers, businesses, or both.

  2. Set licence scope and restrictions

    Pick seat counts, device limits, permitted-use language, and any anti-reverse-engineering or export-control carve-outs you need.

  3. Review the draft

    The draft is verified for clarity, enforceability, and platform-policy alignment.

  4. Publish, embed, or bundle

    Export to PDF, HTML, or Markdown, embed in your installer, or host on a PolicifyAI-served URL for click-wrap acceptance.

Frequently asked questions

What’s the difference between an EULA and Terms of Service?

An EULA governs the licence to use the software itself — installation, restrictions, IP. Terms of Service govern your relationship with the user around the service (payments, accounts, conduct). Many products need both.

Does Apple / Google Play require an EULA?

Apple provides a standard EULA you can use, or you can supply your own if you want custom terms. Google Play requires terms, and most publishers include a separate EULA for clarity.

Ready to draft your eula?

Answer a short questionnaire. Download, publish, or host with PolicifyAI.

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Last reviewed 17 April 2026.

PolicifyAI is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Generated policies are drafting starting points that require review by qualified counsel before publication or reliance.