One engine, three documents, any transaction, 22 countries. A guided interview builds your document from a maintained clause library tuned to local law, then checks it for the gaps that kill deals. Building your document is free, and you preview every section before paying a cent. Unlock only when you want the full text and downloads.
Drafted for your country's law. Explained in plain English. Binding and non-binding, clearly marked. Ready in minutes.
A general AI model will write anything for anyone. It does not know what it left out, and it will not ask. Give it bad information and you get a bad document that looks like a good one.
We specialize in NDAs, MOUs, and Letters of Intent. We ask the questions you did not know to ask. Every clause in your document comes from a library we maintain and version, matched to your jurisdiction. If something important is missing, we tell you before you download.
These documents share common themes, common gaps, and common risks. Knowing them cold is the entire job. It is the only job we do.
Bad NDAs and LOIs fail in the same ways over and over. Any one of these can cost far more than the deal's legal budget. Most of them are invisible until it is too late.
You spend two months and tens of thousands on due diligence. Nothing stops the seller from shopping your offer the whole time. When a better one arrives, you paid to warm up the deal for someone else.
Many LOIs never say which parts are binding. Courts have held parties to deals they believed were still preliminary. The opposite happens too: protections people assumed were binding turned out not to be.
You shared your numbers to explore a partnership. Nothing in the NDA said the information could only be used for that discussion. Now it is shaping a competitor's strategy, and the document does not stop it.
Each side leaves the room with a different deal in their head. Six months later both are certain the other agreed to something they never did. Vague scope is the single most common weakness we see in MOUs.
The deal dies and both sides believe the deposit is theirs. Refund terms that never said when money comes back are among the most common sources of disputes after a collapse.
Before anyone can argue about the actual problem, they argue about whose courts and whose rules apply. You pay for that fight before the real one even starts.
Every one of these is caught by our completeness check before you download your document. That is what specializing buys you.
Check my documentDrafting from scratch is the expensive part. We handle it so the money you do spend goes to judgment, not typing. Building your document, the plain English guide, and the completeness check cost nothing. Downloads start at US$19.99, once per document, every version included.
Plain questions, one at a time, with the reasoning behind each. About 15 minutes.
Built from the clause library, matched to your jurisdiction and your answers.
Anything missing, and anything commonly included that you skipped, is flagged in a clear list.
Your draft, a plain English guide to every clause, and a briefing memo if a lawyer takes the final look.
Protects what you share before you trust. For 2, 3, or 4 parties, flowing both ways or one way only.
Turns a handshake into a shared, written understanding of who does what.
The first real step in buying or selling a business, with the protections that matter.
If you need a different document, we are not your platform. That is the point.
You do not need a law degree to get to a strong first draft. You need to answer the same handful of questions every one of these documents actually turns on. This is the legal prep work that matters before a lawyer ever sees the page, and it is exactly what our guided interview walks you through.
Full legal entity names, where each was formed, and their addresses. "The company" is not a party; "Maple Ridge Capital Inc., a corporation formed under the laws of Ontario" is.
What is this document actually for? A vague purpose is the single most common weakness we see, in NDAs and MOUs alike. Say exactly what discussion or transaction it covers.
Decide, section by section, what takes effect on signature and what is only a statement of intent. Silence on this point is how people end up bound to deals they thought were still preliminary, or unprotected on terms they assumed were locked in.
Choose which jurisdiction's law applies and how disagreements get resolved, courts or arbitration. Settle this now, while everyone still agrees on everything else.
Every document like this needs a shelf life: how long confidentiality lasts, how long the offer stands, when the understanding lapses if nothing further happens.
The person signing needs the authority to bind the entity. State it in the execution block, do not assume it.
DealDocs runs these six steps as a guided interview, then checks your answers for the gaps that trip up documents people wrote entirely on their own.
We do not ship one template and hope it travels. Every jurisdiction below has its own governing law text, formation conventions, and, where it applies, its own statutory clauses, from trade secret notices in the United States to personal information language in Canada.
An NDA protects confidential information shared while parties explore a deal, and is binding as soon as it is signed. An MOU records a shared understanding of who does what, with some sections binding and others a statement of intent. A Letter of Intent sets out the principal terms of a proposed transaction, most commonly a business acquisition, and is binding only in the sections it names as binding.
Usually only in part. Most LOIs state that the overall proposal is non-binding while specific sections, commonly confidentiality, exclusivity, and governing law, are binding immediately on signature. A document that never says which is which is one of the most common defects we see in real LOIs.
Start by naming the exact parties and their legal entities, stating the purpose narrowly, deciding what is binding and what is not, choosing a governing law and dispute resolution method, setting a term or expiry, and confirming who has authority to sign. Our guided interview runs this as a structured process so nothing gets missed, then checks the draft for common gaps before you download it.
No. DealDocs is a document automation platform, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. It gets you to a strong working draft so your own legal counsel can focus on the final review instead of a blank page.
Jurisdiction-specific templates for 21 countries at launch, listed above, from the United Arab Emirates and the United States to Japan, Brazil, and South Africa, with more added as demand grows.
Building a document, the plain English guide, and the completeness check are free. Unlocking the full text and downloads for one document is US$19.99, VAT included. A Deal Pack covering three documents in one project is US$49.99, and a Pro plan covering up to ten documents a month is US$79.99.
Start the guided interview now. Preview every section, read the plain English guide, and run the completeness check before you pay a cent.
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