TermsOfUse.nl

Clear answers for the practical questions people ask before they draft, review, or publish Terms of Use.

FAQ

Simple answers about Terms of Use and the generator.

This FAQ explains how the generator works, what Terms of Use usually cover, what still needs review, and how to move from a draft to a published page.

Scan the group that matches your question.
Open only the answer you need.
Use the guide link when you want more detail.

Question group 1

Getting started

A compact set of answers for this part of the Terms of Use workflow.

3 answers
Who is this tool for?

It is for founders, website owners, SaaS teams, store owners, support staff, and anyone else who wants a strong first draft of Terms of Use without starting from scratch.

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Can I start if I do not know the perfect legal wording yet?

Yes. The generator starts with business facts, not perfect legal wording. You can answer in normal language first and improve the draft later.

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Do I need everything figured out before I begin?

No. You just need a reasonable understanding of your website, service, or store. The goal is to start quickly and improve the draft as your answers become clearer.

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Question group 2

What the generator covers

A compact set of answers for this part of the Terms of Use workflow.

3 answers
What kinds of Terms of Use can this tool help me draft?

The generator is built for website terms, SaaS terms, and ecommerce terms. It changes the focus based on things like accounts, payments, subscriptions, digital delivery, and user content.

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Will the draft include sections about payments, accounts, or refunds?

Yes, if your answers show those topics matter. The tool uses your business type, business model, and practical answers to decide which sections need more attention.

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Does it replace a privacy policy, refund policy, or legal review?

No. Terms of Use usually sit next to other policies. The final draft may still need internal review, policy review, or legal review before publication.

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Question group 3

Draft review and publication

A compact set of answers for this part of the Terms of Use workflow.

3 answers
How do I know when a draft is ready for review?

A draft is usually ready for review when the structure fits your business, the key facts are filled in, and the preview no longer feels clearly wrong for the customer journey.

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Should I publish as soon as the text looks polished?

Not always. A page can look polished and still miss important facts. Publish only after checking the draft against your real policies, promises, and business flow.

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What is the hosted published page for?

It gives you one direct Terms of Use page that you can link from your footer, signup flow, checkout flow, or support replies without first pasting everything onto your own site.

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Question group 4

Legal responsibility and review

A compact set of answers for this part of the Terms of Use workflow.

3 answers
Is the generated draft automatically legally safe to use?

No. The tool helps you draft and structure Terms of Use, but it is not a legal guarantee. The final text still needs to match your business, your policies, and any rules that apply in your industry or country.

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When should I ask for legal review?

Ask for extra review if you have recurring billing, regulated services, user-generated content, digital goods, complex refunds, or country-specific obligations. Those areas carry more risk if the wording is wrong.

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What if I still do not fully trust the draft after review?

Then do not publish yet. Saving the draft, collecting feedback, or asking for legal input is better than putting a page live that your business cannot stand behind.

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Question group 5

Drafts, exports, and updates

A compact set of answers for this part of the Terms of Use workflow.

3 answers
What is the difference between saving, exporting, and publishing?

Saving keeps your working draft for later. Exporting gives you files like PDF, HTML, or text for review or publishing. Publishing creates a hosted Terms of Use page on this site.

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Should I update my Terms after product or policy changes?

Yes. Terms of Use get out of date fast when pricing, access, support promises, moderation rules, or delivery methods change while the page stays the same.

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Can the internal search show FAQ and knowledge pages too?

Yes. The site search helps people find useful public pages quickly. The search result pages themselves stay non-indexable, while the real FAQ and knowledge pages can still be indexed normally.

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