If you run a business in the UK, you’ve probably heard that you “need terms and conditions.”
But what many business owners don’t realise is that online terms and conditions and offline (in-person or paper-based) terms and conditions are not the same thing — and using the wrong approach can leave gaps in protection.

This guide explains the difference in simple terms, why it matters, and how to make sure your terms actually work for your business.

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What are business terms and conditions (in simple terms)?

Business terms and conditions (often shortened to “T&Cs”) set out:

  • what you’re providing
  • how and when payment is made
  • what happens if something goes wrong
  • limits on liability
  • cancellation and refund rights

They act as the rules of the relationship between you and your customer or client.However, how those rules are presented — and when someone is said to have accepted them — depends heavily on whether the transaction happens online or offline.


The core difference: how agreement is formed

The biggest difference between online and offline terms and conditions is how acceptance happens.

Online

Acceptance is usually:

  • clicking “I agree”
  • ticking a checkbox
  • completing a purchase after being clearly shown the terms

This is often called click-wrap or browse-wrap acceptance.

Offline

Acceptance usually happens through:

  • signing a contract
  • agreeing verbally after being shown written terms
  • continuing with a service after terms are provided

Offline acceptance relies much more on timing, clarity, and evidence.erms)


Online business terms and conditions explained

Online terms are used when:

  • selling products through a website
  • offering digital services
  • taking bookings or payments online
  • running an app or subscription service

Key features of online terms

1. Visibility is critical

Your terms must be:

  • easy to find
  • readable
  • shown before the customer commits to payment

Burying them in a footer without drawing attention to them can weaken enforceability.

2. Acceptance must be clear

The strongest online setup includes:

  • a checkbox stating “I agree to the terms and conditions”
  • a link to the terms next to that checkbox
  • a system that records acceptance

This is supported by guidance around contract formation and fairness in consumer contracts from GOV.UK.

3. Consumer law applies strongly online

Online sales trigger additional protections, including:

  • clear pre-contract information
  • cooling-off periods
  • refund rights

These are shaped by consumer protection regulations enforced by bodies such as Competition and Markets Authority.


Offline business terms and conditions explained

Offline terms are used when:

  • providing services in person
  • selling goods face-to-face
  • working with clients under proposals or invoices
  • operating in retail, trades, consultancy, or professional services

Key features of offline terms

1. Timing matters more than format

Offline terms must be provided before or at the point of agreement.

If you send terms after work has started, they may not be binding.

2. Verbal agreements can still be contracts

A contract does not need to be written to exist.
However, enforcing verbal terms is much harder without evidence.

This is why written terms — even if not formally signed — are important.

3. Evidence is essential

Offline disputes often hinge on:

  • emails
  • quotes
  • invoices
  • signed documents
  • proof that terms were shared and accepted

Guidance from ACAS highlights how clarity and documentation reduce disputes — a principle that applies equally to business contracts.

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Online vs Offline: a simple comparison

Area

Online T&Cs

Offline T&Cs

How Terms Are Shared

Website, App, Checkout

Email, Paper, Proposal, Signage

How Acceptance Happens

Click, Tick, Complete Purchase

Signature, Verbal Agreement, Conduct

Evidence of Acceptance

Digital Records, Logs

Emails, Signed docs, Witness

Consumer Protection Focus

Very Strong

Strong But More Contextual

Risk of “not seen” Terms

High If Poorly Displayed

High If Shared Too Late


Why copying online terms for offline use causes problems

One common mistake is using website terms for offline work.

This can fail because:

  • website language assumes digital acceptance
  • clauses reference “clicking” or “online accounts”
  • consumer rights wording may not match the offline transaction
  • cancellation and refund provisions may be inaccurate

Offline terms should reflect real-world processes, not online ones.


Why copying offline terms for online use also causes problems

The opposite mistake is just as risky.

Offline-style terms used online may:

  • fail to meet online consumer information requirements
  • lack proper acceptance mechanisms
  • be unenforceable if customers weren’t clearly alerted to them

This is particularly risky for e-commerce and subscription models.


Data protection and privacy: an online-specific issue

Online businesses usually need:

  • a privacy policy
  • cookie information
  • clarity on how personal data is handled

Guidance from the Information Commissioner’s Office makes clear that online data handling brings additional obligations that offline-only businesses may not face in the same way.Your online terms often need to work alongside these documents.


Which businesses need both online and offline terms?

Many businesses now operate in hybrid models, such as:

  • service businesses that quote offline but take payment online
  • retailers with both physical shops and websites
  • consultants who onboard clients digitally but deliver services offline

In these cases:

  • one-size-fits-all terms rarely work

alignment matters, but wording and structure should differ


What disputes typically arise from unclear terms?

Poorly matched terms often lead to disputes about:

  • cancellations and refunds
  • scope of services
  • payment timing
  • liability for delays or defects
  • jurisdiction and governing law

Clear, correctly structured terms reduce the risk of these issues escalating.


A practical checklist for UK businesses

Ask yourself:

  • Do I sell online, offline, or both?
  • Are my terms written for how my customers actually buy?
  • Do my online terms clearly show acceptance?
  • Are my offline terms shared before work starts?
  • Can I prove someone agreed to my terms?
  • Do my terms reflect current UK consumer law expectations?

If the answer to any of these is “not sure,” it’s worth reviewing your setup.

Need help choosing the right approach?

Online and offline business terms and conditions serve the same purpose — but they work in very different ways.

Using the wrong type, or assuming one set covers everything, can leave your business exposed when something goes wrong.Getting them right early isn’t about paperwork.
It’s about clarity, protection, and fewer disputes later.

To discuss your plans or begin the process:
Call +44 (0)161 491 3933
Email: info@marlegal.co.uk
Or enquire via our Contact page.

Business terms and conditions FAQs

The main difference is how agreement is formed. Online terms rely on digital acceptance, such as clicking a checkbox or completing a checkout process. Offline terms rely on written agreements, verbal acceptance, or conduct, such as starting work after terms are provided.

Often, yes. Online and offline transactions follow different legal and practical rules. Using the same terms for both can create gaps, particularly around acceptance, cancellation rights, and consumer protections.

Online terms can be legally binding if customers are clearly shown the terms and actively accept them before completing a transaction. Poor visibility or unclear acceptance can weaken enforceability.

Yes, in some cases. Offline terms can be enforceable without a signature if the customer was given the terms in advance and proceeded with the transaction. However, proving acceptance is easier when terms are signed or clearly acknowledged.

This is risky. Website terms are usually written for online transactions and may reference digital processes that do not apply offline. This mismatch can cause disputes and make certain clauses unenforceable.

If you cannot show that the terms were clearly provided before agreement, a court may decide they do not apply. This is a common issue in both online and offline disputes and highlights the importance of timing and evidence.

Yes. Online businesses usually also need a privacy policy and cookie information to comply with data protection requirements. These documents should work alongside your terms and conditions.

Businesses with hybrid models — such as service providers who quote offline but take payment online — often need separate but aligned terms for each type of transaction.