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Protect your rights with releases, confidentiality agreements, sworn statements, and demand letters. Trusted since 1995.
NDAs, releases, affidavits, and demand letters for businesses and individuals
Find the right form to release liability, protect confidential information, or send legal notices
Forms to settle disputes, waive claims, and protect yourself from being sued.
5 forms available
Protect trade secrets, business ideas, and other sensitive information.
4 forms available
Formal written notices to demand payment, request records, or undo a contract.
4 forms available
Sworn statements and forms to secure or release claims on property.
State-specific affidavits for all 50 states
3 forms available
Best for: Ending disputes, settling claims, preventing future lawsuits
Best for: Sharing business ideas, trade secrets, sensitive data
Best for: Demanding payment, last warning before suing
Best for: Court filings, government agencies, property claims
Start by identifying what you're trying to accomplish: If you want to prevent someone from suing you, look at releases. If you're sharing sensitive business information, you need an NDA. If someone owes you money, consider a demand letter. Use the decision grid above to match your situation to the right form.
A release of liability is a document where one party gives up the right to sue for past or future claims. An indemnification agreement is a promise by one party to cover any losses or legal costs the other party might face. Releases end claims; indemnification shifts risk for future losses.
Use a one-way Confidentiality Agreement when only one party is sharing sensitive information. Use a Mutual NDA when both parties will share confidential information. Use a Non-Circumvention NDA when you're worried about being cut out of a business deal after making introductions.
While not always legally required, sending a Final Notice Before Legal Action or demand letter is strongly recommended. It documents your attempt to resolve the dispute, may prompt payment without court involvement, and shows the judge you tried to settle first.
A general affidavit is a sworn written statement signed under oath. It's used when you need to formally certify that certain facts are true—commonly for court filings, government agencies, insurance claims, or business transactions. Our General Affidavit is available in state-specific versions for all 50 states.
Yes. Most forms in this category are designed for nationwide use. Our General Affidavit offers state-specific versions for all 50 states. Forms involving property claims (like Claim of Lien) may have state-specific deadlines and filing requirements you should verify.
Yes. All forms are provided in editable formats so you can add or modify terms specific to your situation. You can adjust party names, dates, specific claims being released, confidential information definitions, and other details.
For standard situations—settling a minor dispute, protecting business information before a meeting, or sending a payment demand—most users complete these forms on their own. For complex business deals, high-value disputes, or situations involving litigation, consulting an attorney is recommended.
Yes. Under the federal ESIGN Act and state laws like UETA, electronic signatures are legally valid for releases, NDAs, and most other contracts. Both parties should retain a signed copy for their records.
Forms are available for instant download after purchase. Most users complete them in 15-30 minutes. You'll receive editable formats (Word/PDF) that you can customize and sign immediately.