Disclaimer Generator

Create clear, custom disclaimers in seconds—protect your content, your way.

Tool Icon Disclaimer Generator

Disclaimer Generator
Generated Disclaimer:

About This Tool

So, you need a disclaimer. Maybe for your blog, your app, or that side project you’ve been tinkering with. You could write one from scratch—spend hours Googling legal phrasing, second-guessing every sentence, and wondering if you accidentally promised something you didn’t mean to. Or… you could use a disclaimer generator. It’s not magic. It won’t protect you from a lawsuit if you’re doing sketchy stuff. But it *will* save you time and give you a solid starting point that actually sounds like it belongs on a real website. I’ve used a few of these tools over the years—some clunky, some surprisingly decent. The good ones ask you a few quick questions (like what kind of site you have, whether you collect user data, or if you’re giving medical or financial advice), then spit out a disclaimer that’s tailored enough to feel legit. No fluff. No legalese that sounds like it was written in 1892. Just clear, straightforward language that sets expectations.

Key Features

  • Quick setup—usually under two minutes
  • Customizable based on your content type (blog, e-commerce, health advice, etc.)
  • Generates disclaimers for affiliate links, sponsored content, and liability
  • No legal jargon overload—readable by actual humans
  • Free options available (though paid versions often include better templates)
  • Outputs ready-to-paste HTML or plain text

FAQ

Is a generated disclaimer legally binding?
Not automatically. A disclaimer is only as strong as the context it’s used in. If you’re running a medical advice site and just slap on a generic “we’re not liable” line, that might not hold up. But for most personal blogs, small businesses, or hobby projects? It’s a reasonable layer of protection—especially when combined with common sense and transparency.

Do I really need one?
If you’re linking to products, sharing opinions as fact, or collecting emails, then yeah—probably. Even if it’s just a personal blog. It tells visitors you’re not responsible for their decisions based on your content. It’s not about being paranoid. It’s about being clear.