Legal guide
Everything you need to know about the non-disclosure agreement (nda): what it’s for, what the law requires and how to create it correctly for your website or business.
An NDA (Non-Disclosure Agreement) is the contract by which one or both parties undertake to keep secret the information they exchange for a specific purpose (a collaboration, a negotiation, a project). It protects your know-how, commercial or technical data against its disclosure or misuse.
The agreement covers what constitutes confidential information, the obligations, the exclusions, the duration, the return of information and data protection (GDPR).
Create your non-disclosure agreement (nda) in 2 minutes. Answer a few questions and download the document as Word, PDF or copy it. Free and no sign-up.
Open the generator →Frequently asked questions
If both parties are going to share sensitive information, use the mutual one. If only you disclose it (e.g. to a provider or freelancer), the unilateral one. The generator lets you choose.
It is common for 2 to 5 years from signing, surviving after the end of the relationship. Adjust it to the sensitivity of the information.
Yes. For it to be enforceable it must be signed by both parties. The document includes space for the signatures and the date.
Official sources
The templates in this generator are based on the legislation in force. You can consult the official sources here:
⚠️ Important notice — please read. This generator provides free guidance templates based on current regulations (the GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018, the ePrivacy Regulations and consumer law). They do not constitute legal advice and do not guarantee legal compliance for your specific case.
Each owner is solely responsible for reviewing, adapting and verifying that the texts match their actual activity and applicable law, as well as for effectively complying with their legal obligations. For complex cases, consult a legal professional.
DominaInternet (Jordi Espies Garcia), owner of this tool, assumes no liability for the use of the generated texts or for any consequences arising from their use.