Free legal document generator
Free Disclaimer Generator — FTC, Affiliate & Medical Compliant
Reduce legal liability, disclose affiliate links, comply with FTC 16 CFR Part 255, ASA, ACCC and EU UCP. Mix-and-match 15 disclaimer types — generate free in minutes with a quick sign-up.
- Covers affiliate, Amazon Associates, sponsored, medical, legal, financial and AI disclaimers
- FTC-compliant placement guidance (clear, conspicuous, near each endorsement)
- Mandatory Amazon Associates wording included verbatim
What is a disclaimer?
A disclaimer is a legal statement on your website, blog or app that limits your liability, discloses conflicts of interest and sets expectations about the nature and accuracy of your content. Disclaimers are used to disclose affiliate relationships and sponsored content (required by the FTC in the US and ASA in the UK), limit liability for informational content about health, medicine, law or finance, note that content may not be accurate or up to date, and disclaim responsibility for third-party websites you link to. Some disclaimers are legally required (FTC affiliate disclosure, Amazon Associates statement); others are strongly recommended for liability reduction.
How it works
No legal background needed. Free account required to save your document.
Answer a few questions
Tell us about your business — what you do, where your users are based, and what data you collect.
Preview your document
Your Disclaimer is generated instantly, customised to your answers. Takes about 3 minutes total.
Publish or download
Hosted page, HTML embed, DOCX or plain text. Free with a quick sign-up.
Is a Disclaimer legally required?
Some disclaimers are mandatory under consumer-protection law. Others are strongly recommended for liability reduction.
Affiliate, sponsored and influencer relationships must be disclosed clearly and conspicuously, near each endorsement — not in a footer or buried in hashtags. Now explicitly covers AI-generated endorsements.
- Enforced by:
- FTC
Mandatory verbatim wording: 'As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.' Must appear on every page using Amazon affiliate links.
'#ad' or 'Sponsored' must appear at the start of the post — not buried in hashtags or end of caption.
- Enforced by:
- ASA, CMA
Commercial intent must be 'immediately obvious'. Undisclosed advertising is an unfair commercial practice. Country-specific tags vary (#gesponsert DE, #publicité FR, #publicidad ES).
Influencer and affiliate disclosures must be clear and prominent. ACCC has issued multiple compliance notices since 2022.
- Enforced by:
- ACCC
What is included in your Disclaimer
Most blogs and websites need at least three disclaimers stacked together. Below are the standard groups our generator can produce.
Mandatory disclosures
- Affiliate / paid endorsement disclosure (FTC, ASA, EU UCP, ACCC)
- Amazon Associates verbatim statement
- Sponsored content / influencer disclosure
- FTC-compliant placement: at the top of the post, not in the footer
Professional advice limits
- Medical: 'for informational purposes only, not medical advice'
- Legal: 'not legal advice; no attorney–client relationship'
- Financial: 'not investment advice; consult a licensed advisor'
- Fitness: assumption-of-risk and consult-physician language
Content & accuracy
- 'As is' / 'as available' disclaimer
- No guarantee of accuracy, completeness or timeliness
- Past-performance and testimonials disclaimer
- Errors and omissions disclaimer
Third-party content
- Third-party links and external resources disclaimer
- Endorsement / no-endorsement statement
- Trademark and copyright attribution
- User-generated content disclaimer
Emerging disclosures
- AI-generated content disclosure (FTC 2023 guidance, EU AI Act 2024 transparency obligations)
- Sponsorship by political organisations (FEC, UK Electoral Commission)
- Financial promotions (FCA UK, SEC/FINRA US, ASIC AU)
The 15 disclaimer types — explained
Use one or stack several. Our generator combines them into a single, well-organised disclaimer document.
Affiliate disclaimer
RequiredDisclose any commission earned from affiliate links. Required by FTC, ASA, EU UCP and ACCC.
"This post contains affiliate links. If you click through and purchase, I may earn a commission — at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I genuinely use."
Amazon Associates disclosure
RequiredMandatory verbatim wording from Amazon's Operating Agreement §5. Must appear on every page using Amazon affiliate links.
"As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases."
Sponsored content disclosure
Required'#ad' or 'Sponsored' at the start of any paid or gifted post. Updated 2023 FTC guidance covers gifted-only relationships.
Medical disclaimer
RecommendedHealth, fitness and wellness sites should state content is informational only, not medical advice, and not a substitute for a licensed professional.
Legal disclaimer
RecommendedLegal information sites must clarify they do not create an attorney–client relationship and content is not legal advice.
Financial disclaimer
Required for regulated contentInvestment, credit and insurance content requires specific disclosures under FCA (UK), SEC/FINRA (US) and ASIC (AU).
Fitness disclaimer
RecommendedReduce liability for injury claims with assumption-of-risk and consult-physician language.
'As is' / no-warranty disclaimer
RecommendedGeneric content disclaimer that limits warranty for accuracy, completeness and timeliness.
Past-performance disclaimer
Required for results-based claimsStandard for testimonials, case studies and results pages: 'past performance does not guarantee future results.'
Third-party links disclaimer
RecommendedDisclaim responsibility for third-party websites linked from your site.
'Views are my own' disclaimer
RecommendedPersonal blogs by employees should clarify the views expressed are not the employer's.
Errors & omissions disclaimer
RecommendedAcknowledge that content may contain errors and limit liability for resulting losses.
Email disclaimer
RecommendedConfidentiality, no-binding-offer and disclaimer for misdirected email — common at the end of business email signatures.
Copyright disclaimer
RecommendedReserve all rights and clarify fair-use position. Useful for content sites concerned about scraping and reuse.
AI-generated content disclaimer
Emerging requirementIncreasingly expected. EU AI Act (2024) imposes transparency obligations for AI-generated content; FTC guidance updated May 2023.
Built for your business type
The generator adjusts clauses based on your industry — so you only get the language you actually need.
Affiliate blogs & review sites
Affiliate disclosure at the top of every post, Amazon Associates verbatim line, third-party links disclaimer.
Health & wellness
Medical disclaimer, fitness disclaimer, no-doctor-patient-relationship statement, FDA dietary-supplement disclosure where applicable.
Personal finance & investing
Financial disclaimer, past-performance disclaimer, no-investment-advice statement; FCA / SEC / FINRA / ASIC compliance where regulated.
AI tools & content
AI-output accuracy disclaimer, training-data disclosure, prohibited uses, EU AI Act transparency notice.
Trusted by 50,000+ businesses
"We were missing the Amazon verbatim line on category pages — Amazon flagged us. Generated and deployed in 20 minutes; account reinstated."
"The medical-and-fitness combo template is exactly what our wellness blog needed. Cleaner than our old PDF."
"Caught the FTC 2023 update for AI-generated content before our legal team did. Worth bookmarking."
Frequently asked questions
Questions about Disclaimer before you get started?
What is a Disclaimer?
A Disclaimer is a legal statement that limits your liability and sets expectations about the nature of your content. It clarifies that your content is not professional advice (legal, medical, financial), discloses affiliations like sponsored content or affiliate links, and alerts readers to potential errors or limitations.
Do I need a Disclaimer for my blog or website?
Yes, if you publish content that could be interpreted as professional advice, contain affiliate links, or involve user-submitted content. Without a Disclaimer, you may be held liable if readers rely on your content and suffer harm. Most content websites, review sites, and affiliate blogs need one.
What is an affiliate disclaimer and is it required?
An affiliate disclaimer discloses that you earn a commission when readers click your affiliate links and make purchases. The FTC (US), ASA (UK), and similar bodies in most countries legally require clear disclosure of material connections. Amazon Associates and most affiliate programs also contractually require it.
Do I need a medical or legal disclaimer?
Yes, if you publish health, wellness, medical, legal, or financial content. Even general informational content can expose you to liability if a reader relies on it and suffers harm. A clear disclaimer that your content is not professional advice and readers should consult a qualified professional is essential.
Where should I display my Disclaimer?
Display your Disclaimer in your website footer (on every page), at the top of pages containing advisory content, next to any affiliate links or sponsored posts, and anywhere you make claims about products or services. It should be easy to find and clearly written.
What is the difference between a Disclaimer and Terms & Conditions?
A Disclaimer focuses on limiting your liability for specific content, advice, or information. Terms & Conditions are broader — they govern the entire relationship between your business and users, covering account use, intellectual property, payment terms, and dispute resolution.
Stack the right disclaimers in minutes
FTC, ASA, EU UCP and ACCC compliant. Mix affiliate, medical, financial and 12 more disclaimer types. Free, no email.
Generate My Disclaimer FreeFree to generate. Takes about 3 minutes. Free account required.
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