A client once asked me to “just send over an NDA before the call.”
Simple request.
Except I didn’t actually have one.
So I searched online for a free NDA template and immediately fell into a mess of:
paywalls,
overcomplicated legal documents,
broken PDF downloads,
and templates written for giant corporations instead of normal people.
Most freelancers and small startup founders don’t need a 17 page legal document.
They need something clear enough to protect their work without hiring a lawyer just to understand it.
That frustration is what made me build this:
👉 docforge.website/tools/nda-generator
A simple NDA Generator that creates clean agreements in minutes.
While building it, I realized most people searching for NDAs are confused about the same questions:
What actually counts as confidential information?
What’s the difference between a mutual NDA and a one way NDA?
Can freelancers use NDAs?
How long should confidentiality last?
What happens if someone breaks the agreement?
Most NDA generators never explain these things properly.
So I started adding actual context around the document instead of only generating PDFs.
Here are the two most common NDA types people use:
Mutual NDA:
Both sides share confidential information.
Common for partnerships, startup discussions, agency collaborations, and product planning.
One Way NDA:
Only one side shares sensitive information.
Common for client work, contractors, developers, or employees.
I also noticed many templates online completely ignore important clauses like:
Confidential information definitions
Duration of confidentiality
Exclusions from protection
Data handling expectations
Jurisdiction and governing law
These details matter more than fancy legal language.
The goal with DocForge was simple:
Create business documents normal humans can actually use.
No subscriptions.
No account required.
No confusing setup process.
Just create the agreement and export the PDF.
Top comments (0)