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Placeholder Legal Disclaimer Generator
Legal text has a voice — passive constructions, liability carve-outs, defined terms — and lorem ipsum cannot fake it. This generator fills footers, modals, and terms screens with placeholder copy in that register, drawn from four separate six-sentence banks: terms of service, privacy policy, medical, and financial. Each type genuinely reads different: privacy output talks data collection and retention, financial output talks investment risk and past performance. The length setting decides how many sentences you get from the chosen bank — two for short, four for medium, all six for long. That design has an honest consequence: at long, every run contains the same six sentences and only their order changes, and even medium draws four of the same six. It is exactly enough variety for mockups, which is the point — this is a design tool, and nothing it produces has legal standing. Swap in attorney-reviewed copy before launch.
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your disclaimer type from the dropdown — choose the category that matches your design screen (terms, privacy, medical, or financial).
- Choose a length that fits the space in your mockup: short for footers and banners, medium for modals, long for full-page legal screens.
- Click the generate button to produce your placeholder legal text.
- Copy the output and paste it directly into your design tool, prototype, or presentation slide.
- Replace the placeholder with attorney-reviewed legal copy before your product launches to real users.
Use Cases
- •Filling a GDPR consent modal with realistic privacy policy copy during a Figma prototype review
- •Populating the terms of service screen in a multi-step onboarding flow for stakeholder sign-off
- •Adding a financial risk disclosure block to a fintech dashboard prototype before investor demos
- •Testing whether users scroll past or interact with medical disclaimers in a health app usability session
- •Dropping a short liability disclaimer into a mobile footer to validate spacing and type hierarchy in Figma
Tips
- →For mobile app footers, generate a short medical or financial disclaimer and truncate it with a 'Read more' link to simulate real-world patterns.
- →Run the same type two or three times and layer outputs together if you need an extra-long terms page — varied phrasing looks more authentic than repeated blocks.
- →When testing GDPR consent flows, pair a short privacy placeholder with a separate cookie disclaimer to mimic the two-document structure real apps use.
- →Avoid using the same generated block across multiple screens in a single prototype — reviewers notice repeated text and it undermines the realism you're going for.
- →For client presentations, swap lorem ipsum in every legal area before the review meeting — stakeholders fixate on missing copy and miss layout feedback entirely.
- →If your design uses a narrow column width, choose the short length even for full-page legal screens; medium copy in a narrow container can look unnaturally dense.
FAQ
can I use this generated disclaimer as real legal text for my app
No — the output is placeholder copy with no legal force, written to look right in a layout, not to protect anyone. Replace every generated sentence with copy drafted or reviewed by a qualified lawyer before your product ships.
does the disclaimer type actually change the wording
Yes. Each of the four types has its own six-sentence bank: terms covers service changes and as-is warranties, privacy covers data collection and retention, medical pushes professional consultation, and financial covers investment risk. Switching type swaps the entire vocabulary, not just a label.
why does the long setting produce the same sentences every time
Long outputs the entire six-sentence bank for your chosen type, so consecutive runs contain identical sentences in a different order; medium draws four of the same six and short draws two. Variety comes from switching types, not from regenerating. For mockups that is usually plenty — no reviewer reads placeholder terms twice.
why use fake legal text instead of copying a real company's disclaimer
Real disclaimers are copyrighted, tailored to someone else's situation, and risky if your mockup leaks — placeholder text that merely sounds legal avoids all three problems. It fills the block convincingly during design review while staying unmistakably dummy content on close reading.
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