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Privacy Policy Generator

Generate a free custom privacy policy tailored to your website, app, or blog — ready to copy or download in seconds.

Business Information

Data You Collect

Third-Party Services

Data Practices

Regulatory Jurisdiction

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Fill in your details and click Generate Privacy Policy to create your document.

About the Privacy Policy Generator

A privacy policy is a legal document that explains how your website or app collects, uses, and protects user data. This free generator creates a customized privacy policy based on your specific business type, data practices, and applicable regulations such as GDPR and CCPA. Simply fill in your details and download the document — no sign-up required.

How to Use

  1. Enter your company name, website URL, and contact email.
  2. Select the types of personal data you collect and any third-party services you use.
  3. Choose your data retention period and applicable regulations (GDPR, CCPA).
  4. Click Generate Privacy Policy to create your document.
  5. Copy the text or download it as a .txt file, then add it to your website.

Frequently Asked Questions

The generated privacy policy is a starting point based on common legal requirements. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice. For businesses operating in regulated industries or collecting sensitive data, we recommend reviewing the document with a qualified attorney.

Yes, in most cases. If your website collects any personal data (including cookies or analytics), you are legally required to have a privacy policy under laws such as GDPR (Europe), CCPA (California), and others. Even simple contact forms require disclosure of how data is used.

GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation) is a European Union law that governs how personal data of EU residents is collected and used. If your website has visitors from the EU — regardless of where your business is based — you likely need to comply with GDPR requirements.

The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) gives California residents rights over their personal data. Businesses that meet certain thresholds (annual revenue over $25M, data on 100,000+ consumers, or deriving 50%+ of revenue from selling data) must comply with CCPA.

You should update your privacy policy whenever your data practices change — for example, when you add new third-party services, start collecting new types of data, or when relevant laws change. It is good practice to review it at least once a year.