Don't let a chatbot write your contract. Your first document's free — claim yours →
Intellectual Property & Confidentiality

Software License Agreement

A comprehensive B2B software license for proprietary software — covering license type, seat limits, source code, data ownership, SLA (for SaaS), open source disclosure, audit rights, and liability caps. It's built from a framework a licensed attorney designed, with your state's requirements wired in; the AI assembles it from your answers and never writes the law. No hallucinations, no guesses.

from $15
Core $15 · Advanced $30 — choose on the next step
Attorney-designed State-specific Instant download
SAMPLE PREVIEW

Software License Agreement

  • 1. Parties & Software
  • 2. License Grant
  • 3. License Type & Scope
  • 4. Delivery & Installation
  • 5. Source Code & Modifications
Generate your document →

What's included

In every version — Core ($15) and Advanced ($30):

Parties & Software
License Grant
License Type & Scope
Delivery & Installation
Source Code & Modifications
Data & Privacy
Support & Maintenance
Uptime & SLA

PROFESSIONAL ($30) ADDS

The full set of optional clauses and protections
Advanced provisions for complex or higher-stakes situations

Why not just ask a chatbot?

A chatbot can draft this software license agreement in seconds — and quietly leave out a required carve-out, apply the wrong state's rules, or invent a clause. It will never tell you it guessed. Studies show general AI gets the law wrong on 58–88% of legal questions. An ArtiEsq software license agreement is attorney-built and state-specific, so you're not betting your business on a guess.

source: Stanford RegLab / HAI, 2024

What a chatbot tends to get wrong here
  • [ ! ]Omits a required carve-out
  • [ ! ]Applies the wrong state’s rules
  • [ ! ]Invents a clause that isn’t real

Generate your document in minutes.

Attorney-designed. State-specific. No hallucinations, no guesses.

Generate your document — from $15
ArtiEsq is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. Using it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Statistic: Stanford RegLab/HAI (2024).