Terms of Service Generator
Draft a terms-of-service agreement that protects your business without sounding like a copy-paste template. Liability limits, IP protection, acceptable use, account suspension, and dispute resolution — tuned to the jurisdictions where you operate.
What's included in every draft
Acceptance, eligibility, and age-of-majority clauses
Account responsibilities and suspension / termination rules
Intellectual-property ownership and licence grant language
Payment, refund, and subscription-renewal terms (when relevant)
Liability limits, disclaimers of warranty, and indemnities
Governing law, jurisdiction, and dispute-resolution mechanism
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
SaaS companies billing on subscription
Monthly and annual subscription models need auto-renewal disclosures, cancellation mechanics, and clear refund rules — all covered in the draft.
Marketplaces and two-sided platforms
The output includes buyer / seller role definitions, dispute handling between users, and the platform’s liability carve-outs.
Free web apps with account sign-up
Even free products need acceptance, acceptable-use, IP, and termination clauses to manage abuse and protect the business.
Developer APIs and platforms
API-specific terms cover rate limits, key security, data-use restrictions, and the platform’s right to deprecate endpoints.
Jurisdiction coverage
EU Consumer Rights Directive and Unfair Contract Terms
This document is designed to align with Directive 2011/83/EU information requirements and the Unfair Terms Directive (93/13/EEC), so one-sided clauses are flagged and consumer statutory rights are preserved.
UK Consumer Rights Act 2015
The PolicifyAI system outputs terms that respect CRA fairness tests, statutory rights to quality, fitness for purpose, and the transparency requirement in section 68.
US state law and the FAA
Compliance templates can include arbitration and class-action-waiver clauses where enforceable under the Federal Arbitration Act, plus California-specific disclosures (Civil Code s.1789.3) when applicable.
Platform and app-store requirements
Software-generated output references Apple, Google Play, and Stripe terms obligations — the standard minimum rights, EULA references, and subscription disclosures those platforms require.
How it works in five minutes
Describe your product and commercial model
Answer questions about plans, pricing, refund stance, and geographic reach so the terms align with how you actually sell.
Pick governing law and dispute resolution
Choose courts, arbitration, or a hybrid model and select the governing jurisdiction — the draft will adapt accordingly.
Review the draft
The draft is verified for accuracy, enforceability, and compliance with consumer-rights regulations.
Publish or export
Export to PDF, HTML, or Markdown, host on a PolicifyAI-served URL, or paste directly into your site footer.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need terms of service if I’m pre-launch?
Yes. Terms form the contract between you and your users. Many platforms (app stores, payment processors) require a published terms URL before accepting your account or listing.
Can I include a mandatory arbitration clause?
Yes, where permitted by law. The questionnaire asks whether you want arbitration, class-action waiver, or court-based dispute resolution, and the output adapts accordingly.
How is this different from a free template?
Templates are static and generic. PolicifyAI drafts the terms around your business type, plan structure, and jurisdictions, then verifies the draft for accuracy and completeness.
Ready to draft your terms of service?
Answer a short questionnaire. Download, publish, or host with PolicifyAI.
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.