When building a new website, most people focus on design, content, and SEO first. Legal pages usually get added later, often just before launch. This often happens right after creating pages like your Privacy Policy, with Terms and Conditions being left until last or overlooked entirely.
That becomes a problem once the site starts getting traffic, collecting data, or offering services. Without clear terms, you have no defined rules for how your website can be used, what users can and cannot do, and how you limit your responsibility.
In most sites I build, the Terms and Conditions page is part of the core setup phase, not something added at the end. It doesn’t need to be overly complex, but it does need to exist and reflect how your site actually works.
Table of Contents
Quick Answer / Summary
To create a Terms and Conditions page for your website, you need to:
- Create a new page in WordPress
- Add standard sections like usage rules, limitations, and liability disclaimers
- Customize the content to match your website
- Link the page in your footer so it’s always accessible
You can write it yourself, use a generator, or adapt a template, but it should always reflect your specific site.
Why This Matters
A Terms and Conditions page defines how people are allowed to use your website. It helps protect you from misuse, sets expectations, and gives you a reference point if something goes wrong.
Without it, you have:
- No clear rules for users
- No limitation of liability
- No defined ownership of your content
- No structure for handling disputes
Even for small websites, this page adds a layer of protection and makes your site look more complete and trustworthy.
Step-by-Step Instructions
Step 1: Create a New Page in WordPress
Go to your WordPress dashboard:
- Pages → Add New
- Title the page: Terms and Conditions
- Leave the permalink as something clean like:
/terms-and-conditions/
Publish the page once it’s ready.
Step 2: Add the Core Sections
A Terms and Conditions page doesn’t need to be complicated, but it should cover the basics. These are the sections I usually include on most sites.
1. Introduction
Explain what the page is and who it applies to.
Example:
- Who owns the website
- That users agree to the terms by using the site
2. Use of the Website
Define what users can and cannot do.
Typical points:
- No illegal use
- No misuse of content
- No attempts to damage or disrupt the site
3. Intellectual Property
Clarify that your content belongs to you.
This usually covers:
- Text, images, branding
- Restrictions on copying or reuse
4. Disclaimer
Explain that the content is provided for general information.
For example:
- Not professional advice
- No guarantee of accuracy
This is especially important for sites that publish tutorials or guides.
5. Limitation of Liability
This limits your responsibility if something goes wrong.
In most cases, it states that:
- You are not liable for damages from using the site
- Users take responsibility for how they use the information
6. External Links
If your site links to other websites, include a section explaining that:
- You are not responsible for third-party content
7. Changes to Terms
State that you can update the terms at any time.
8. Contact Information
Provide a way for users to contact you if they have questions.
Step 3: Customize the Content
This is where most people make mistakes.
Instead of copying a generic template and leaving it unchanged, adjust it to match your site:
- If you run a blog → focus on content usage and disclaimers
- If you offer services → include service-related terms
- If you use affiliate links → reflect that in your disclaimers
In my experience, even small edits here make the page far more useful and credible.
Step 4: Add the Page to Your Footer
Your Terms and Conditions page should always be accessible.
Go to:
- Appearance → Menus
- Add the page to your footer menu
Most websites group it with:
- Privacy Policy
- Cookie Policy
- Disclosure
This is standard practice and expected by users.
Practical Tips and Observations
- Keep the structure simple. Long legal paragraphs are common, but clarity matters more than complexity.
- If your site grows, revisit this page. I usually update it when adding new features like forms, memberships, or services.
- If you’re using tools like analytics or ads, make sure your legal pages (including this one) are consistent with how your site actually operates.
When I review websites, I often see Terms pages that don’t match the site at all. That’s usually a sign they were copied without thinking about how the site works.
Common Mistakes
1. Copying Without Editing
Using a template is fine. Leaving it unchanged is not.
2. Making It Too Vague
If your site offers something specific (services, downloads, tools), your terms should reflect that.
3. Hiding the Page
If users can’t find it, it doesn’t do its job. Always include it in the footer.
4. Forgetting to Update It
As your site evolves, your terms should evolve too.
When to Use This vs Alternatives
For most websites, a simple Terms and Conditions page is enough.
However, you may need a more detailed version if:
- You run an eCommerce store
- You offer paid services
- You have user accounts or memberships
In those cases, it’s often worth using a legal generator or getting professional input to cover more specific scenarios. For example, you can review a sample Terms and Conditions template to understand how more detailed agreements are structured.
For basic blogs and informational websites, a well-structured standard page is usually sufficient.
Conclusion
A Terms and Conditions page is a simple but important part of your website setup. It defines how your site can be used, protects your content, and sets clear expectations for users.
It doesn’t need to be complicated, but it should be accurate, visible, and aligned with how your website actually works.

Etienne Basson works with website systems, SEO-driven site architecture, and technical implementation. He writes practical guides on building, structuring, and optimizing websites for long-term growth.