About AI Disclaimer Generator
AI Disclaimer Generator writes the short legal notices that protect a business when it publishes information that readers might rely on, medical, financial, legal, affiliate, fitness, "results not typical," and similar disclaimers. It is built for bloggers, course creators, affiliates, and small publishers who need clear, defensible language without retaining a lawyer for every page.
Who this tool is for
- Health, fitness, and wellness bloggers publishing content that could be mistaken for medical advice
- Personal-finance creators and YouTubers who must label content as "not financial advice"
- Affiliate marketers required by the FTC to disclose paid links and sponsorships
- Online course creators adding "results not typical" and earnings disclaimers
- Legal-information sites and self-help publishers needing "not legal advice" notices
Real use cases
- Add an FTC-compliant affiliate disclosure to a product-review blog before monetizing
- Write a medical disclaimer for a nutrition or fitness coach's website and intake form
- Add an "earnings disclaimer" to a course sales page selling a business or trading program
- Create the "for informational purposes only" footer on a legal-information directory
- Write the testimonial disclaimer ("individual results may vary") for a coaching site's case-study page
How to use AI Disclaimer Generator
- Specify the disclaimer type: medical, financial, legal, affiliate, earnings, fitness, testimonial, or general informational
- Describe the content the disclaimer applies to (a blog, a course, a YouTube channel, a printed book)
- Identify the audience and jurisdiction (US, EU, UK, Canada, Australia) so the language reflects local rules
- Note any specific obligations: FTC for affiliates and endorsements, FDA for health claims, SEC for investment-related content
- Choose placement: page footer, individual post header, course landing page, or video description, the wording shifts slightly by format
Tips for better results
- FTC rules require affiliate and sponsorship disclosures to be clear, conspicuous, and close to the recommendation, not buried in a footer; "ad," "sponsored," or "affiliate link" must be visible before the click
- Medical, legal, and financial disclaimers should appear above the fold on the relevant page, not only in the footer; courts give less weight to disclaimers users had to scroll to find
- Disclaimers do not override real legal duty, a fitness coach who actually causes injury is not protected by a generic "consult your doctor" line if there was negligence
- Match the disclaimer to the actual content; a generic "not legal advice" line on a page giving very specific legal recommendations is weak evidence in a dispute
Frequently asked questions
Is this output enough to fully protect me legally?
No. Disclaimers reduce risk but do not eliminate liability, and they are not a substitute for legal advice. For high-risk content (health, finance, legal, investment, products that could cause harm), have a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction review the disclaimer and your business setup including insurance.
Where on my site should the disclaimer appear?
It depends on type. Affiliate disclosures must appear close to the affiliate link (FTC guidance). Medical, financial, and legal disclaimers should appear at the top of the relevant content and in the footer. A single deeply-buried footer link is the weakest possible placement.
Do I need different disclaimers for the US, EU, and UK?
Yes, often. FTC rules apply to US-targeted content; the UK has CAP and ASA standards; the EU has consumer-protection directives. If your audience is meaningfully international, get a lawyer to confirm the disclaimers cover each region you operate in.