What is a terms and conditions generator?
A terms and conditions generator is a tool that assembles a ready-to-publish terms-of-service document from a short questionnaire. Instead of paying a lawyer thousands of rupees for a first draft or copying a generic US template that ignores Indian law, you answer a few questions about your business and the generator produces a structured contract you can paste straight onto your website or app. This page is built specifically for Indian websites, e-commerce stores, SaaS products and marketplaces, so every clause is framed around Indian statutes rather than the GDPR or California law that most foreign generators assume.
Why Indian websites need terms and conditions
Terms and conditions form a binding agreement between you and every visitor who uses your site. Under the Indian Contract Act 1872, a clickwrap or browsewrap arrangement becomes enforceable the moment a user accepts it, which is why the generated document opens with a clear acceptance clause. For consumer-facing businesses the Consumer Protection Act 2019 and the Consumer Protection (E-Commerce) Rules 2020 add disclosure, fairness and grievance-redressal duties — an unfair contract term can be struck down and attract penalties. If your platform hosts user content or acts as an intermediary, the Information Technology Act 2000 and the IT (Intermediary Guidelines and Digital Media Ethics Code) Rules 2021 require you to publish rules of usage and appoint a grievance officer. Well-drafted terms let you limit liability, reserve intellectual-property rights, define prohibited conduct, and fix the courts and governing law that will hear any dispute.
What you fill in
The form is intentionally short. In Step 1 you enter your business name, website URL and a contact email, and pick the closest business type (website, e-commerce, SaaS, marketplace or content). In Step 2 you choose the Indian city and state whose courts will have exclusive jurisdiction and decide whether to include an arbitration clause under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996. In Step 3 you tick the clauses you need: payments and pricing, refunds and cancellations, user accounts, user-generated content, intellectual property, prohibited use, third-party links, warranty disclaimer, termination, shipping, subscriptions and indemnification. Acceptance of terms, governing law, limitation of liability and a "changes to terms" clause are always included because almost every site needs them.
India-specific clauses you get
The output references the laws your users and any reviewing advocate will expect to see: a governing-law clause naming the laws of India, an exclusive-jurisdiction clause naming your chosen city, a consumer-rights and grievance-redressal clause aligned with the Consumer Protection Act 2019, and an electronic-contract acknowledgement under the Information Technology Act 2000. If you sell goods you get refund, cancellation and shipping clauses framed for Indian e-commerce; if you run a subscription you get an auto-renewal and cancellation clause. Everything is written in plain English so you can read and edit it before publishing.
How to use the generated document
Click Generate, review the preview, then export. Copy the HTML straight into a "Terms & Conditions" page on your CMS, download the Markdown for your docs or GitHub, or use Print / PDF to save a signed-style copy. Link the page in your website footer and reference it at checkout and signup so acceptance is recorded. Pair it with a DPDPA privacy policy and a compliance checklist to cover both the contractual and the data-protection sides of Indian law.
⚠️ Not legal advice
This generator produces a structured starting template based on common Indian commercial practice. It is not legal advice and does not create a lawyer-client relationship. Laws change and every business is different — for regulated, high-value, or unusual operations, have a qualified Indian advocate review the document before you publish it.