A solid shopify privacy policy template is the first of four legal pages every store needs before taking a real order: privacy policy, refund policy, shipping policy, and terms of service. Skip them and you risk Shopify Payments suspension, GDPR fines, and chargeback losses you cannot dispute.
Shopify auto-generates basic versions of all four. They are a starting point, not a finished policy. Pasting them in and forgetting about them is the most common mistake new merchants make.
This guide walks through every required policy, what to customize, GDPR and CCPA specifics, dropshipping disclosures, and the mistakes that get stores deplatformed.
In this post
- The four required policies
- Privacy policy essentials
- Refund policy
- Shipping policy
- Terms of service
- GDPR and CCPA compliance
- Dropshipping-specific clauses
- Common mistakes
- FAQ
The four required policies
Every Shopify store should publish four legal pages and link them in the footer:
- Privacy policy (legally required in most jurisdictions).
- Refund and return policy (required by Shopify Payments and most consumer law).
- Shipping policy (required by Shopify Payments for physical goods).
- Terms of service (strongly recommended, limits your liability).
Optional but smart additions: cookie policy (mandatory in EU), accessibility statement, AUP (acceptable use policy) if you allow user content.
Generate a starting set of all four with the free Policy Generator, then customize each one to match your actual store operations.
Privacy policy essentials
The privacy policy explains what personal data you collect, why, who you share it with, and how customers can access, correct, or delete it.
At minimum, your policy must list:
- What you collect (name, email, address, payment info, IP, browsing data).
- How you collect it (checkout forms, cookies, analytics pixels).
- Why you collect it (order fulfillment, marketing, fraud prevention).
- Who you share it with (Shopify, payment processors, shipping carriers, email tools).
- How long you keep it.
- How customers can request access or deletion.
- Your business name, address, and contact email.
The Shopify auto-generated template covers the structure, but it leaves placeholders. Fill in every bracket. Empty placeholders signal “I never read this” and can void the policy in court.
Refund policy
Your refund policy is the document customers and credit card companies will quote back to you during chargebacks. Vague language costs you chargeback disputes.
Spell out:
- The window (most stores: 14 to 30 days from delivery).
- Condition required (unused, original packaging, tags attached).
- Who pays return shipping (you or the customer).
- Restocking fees, if any.
- Exclusions (final sale items, custom orders, hygiene products, perishables).
- Refund processing time (5 to 10 business days is standard).
- Refund method (original payment only or store credit option).
If you sell internationally, state who pays return shipping for international orders. Customers will assume you do unless told otherwise.
Returns are also a margin issue. Read our Shopify transaction fees explained guide to understand how refunds interact with payment processing fees, and use the Profit Margin Calculator to model the real impact.
Shipping policy
The shipping policy answers the questions customers ask before they buy. If they cannot find the answer, they bounce.
Include:
- Processing time (1 to 3 business days is standard).
- Available shipping methods and carriers.
- Estimated delivery times by region.
- Shipping rates or free shipping threshold.
- Countries you ship to.
- Customs and duties responsibility for international orders.
- What happens if a package is lost or damaged.
- Tracking information policy.
For international shipping, the duties disclosure is the line that protects you from chargebacks. State clearly that customers are responsible for any import duties, customs fees, or VAT charged at delivery.
Terms of service
Terms of service is the contract between you and the customer. It limits your liability, governs disputes, and protects your trademarks.
Cover at minimum:
- Acceptance of terms (using the site = agreeing).
- Account responsibilities.
- Payment terms.
- Intellectual property rights.
- Disclaimer of warranties.
- Limitation of liability.
- Indemnification.
- Governing law and jurisdiction.
- Changes to the terms.
GDPR and CCPA compliance
GDPR applies if you sell to anyone in the EU or UK, regardless of where your business is based. CCPA applies to businesses with California customers (with revenue and data thresholds, but most stores assume yes).
GDPR adds:
- Lawful basis for processing each type of data.
- Right to access, correct, delete, and export personal data.
- Cookie consent banner with granular opt-in (not opt-out).
- Data Processing Addendum with all processors (Shopify provides one).
- Breach notification within 72 hours.
CCPA adds:
- “Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information” link in the footer.
- Disclosure of categories of data sold or shared in the past 12 months.
- Right to opt out without penalty.
Shopify’s customer privacy API handles consent banners if your theme supports it. If not, install Cookiebot, Termly, or iubenda.
Dropshipping-specific clauses
Dropshipping stores need extra disclosures because shipping times are longer and product quality is less controlled.
- Realistic delivery windows. If you ship from China, state 14 to 30 days. Hiding this is the #1 chargeback trigger.
- Order processing disclaimer. Explain that orders ship from a fulfillment partner.
- Quality variation note. Slight variations in color or size are common with overseas manufacturing.
- Returns address. Be clear about whether returns go to a domestic warehouse or back overseas.
- Order cancellation window. Most dropshipping stores allow cancellation within 12 to 24 hours of order placement.
Dropshipping margins are thin to begin with, and a wrong plan choice eats into them further. See which Shopify plan to choose in 2026 and our Plan Comparison Tool.
Common mistakes
- Empty placeholders. “[Insert business name here]” still showing in production.
- Copy-pasting from another store. Including their business name, jurisdiction, and email.
- No physical address. Shopify Payments requires it. Use a registered agent or virtual office if you work from home.
- Conflicting policies. Refund window says 14 days on the policy page but 30 days on the product page.
- Missing cookie banner in EU. Even if your business is US-based.
- No “last updated” date. Courts and regulators want to see versioning.
- Hiding policies in modal popups. They must be linked from the footer of every page.
Once your policies are sound, the next priority is technical SEO. Our Shopify SEO checklist for 2026 and JSON-LD Product Schema Generator handle indexing and structured data.
For product page UX (which directly affects refund rates), good variant images and per-variant filtering reduce returns. Rubik Variant Images handles the product page side. Rubik Combined Listings handles separate-product structures and collection page swatches.
FAQ
Can I use the Shopify auto-generated privacy policy?
As a starting point, yes. You must fill in every placeholder, add your specific data processors, and review against GDPR and CCPA requirements before publishing.
Do I need a privacy policy if I do not sell to the EU?
Yes. Most US states (California, Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah) and many other countries require one. If you collect any personal data, you need a policy.
Is a refund policy legally required?
Shopify Payments requires one. Many jurisdictions also require clear refund terms for distance selling, including the EU’s 14-day cooling-off period.
Can I have a no-refund policy?
For final-sale or custom items, yes. A blanket no-refund policy is illegal in many jurisdictions including the EU and UK, where the 14-day right of withdrawal cannot be waived for most goods.
Do I need a separate cookie policy?
If you have EU traffic and use any non-essential cookies (analytics, ads, retargeting), yes. A cookie consent banner is also required.
Where should I link my policies?
The footer of every page, the checkout page, and the account creation form. Shopify’s checkout settings let you require checkbox acceptance of TOS at checkout.
How often should I update my policies?
Review annually, and update any time you add a new data processor, change shipping or return terms, or expand to a new region.
Generate your store policies now
Use the free Policy Generator to create all four policies in under 5 minutes, then customize them to match your store.





