Whether you're navigating casual dating, BDSM dynamics, polyamorous relationships, or just want to keep your personal life private, this hub provides the legal tools you need. From enforceable NDAs to emergency takedown letters, each resource is updated for 2026 federal laws including the TAKE IT DOWN Act and DEFIANCE Act.

Privacy Agreements

Enforceable NDAs to protect your intimate privacy before, during, and after relationships.

Privacy Tools

Interactive tools to understand your rights and take action to protect your privacy.

Legal Guides

In-depth articles on relationship privacy law, enforceability, and real-world lessons.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about relationship NDAs and intimate privacy agreements.

Yes, when properly drafted. Courts regularly enforce confidentiality agreements in intimate contexts. The key requirements are: (1) both parties must receive something of value (consideration), (2) the terms must be specific and reasonable, (3) it can't require anyone to hide illegal activity, and (4) both parties must sign voluntarily. The Stormy Daniels case showed that even high-profile NDAs are taken seriously by courts.
The remedies depend on your agreement's terms. Most relationship NDAs include: (1) Liquidated damages — a pre-set penalty amount (typically $10,000–$100,000), (2) Injunctive relief — a court order to stop the disclosure and remove any published content, and (3) Actual damages — compensation for provable harm like lost income, therapy costs, or reputational damage. The threat of legal action often prompts quick removal without going to court.
Yes, if your NDA or photo consent form includes deletion obligations. Best practice is to specify: what must be deleted (originals, copies, cloud backups), the deadline (e.g., within 7 days of request), and verification method (written confirmation). Without an agreement, you may still have rights under state revenge porn laws if images are shared, but deletion rights are harder to enforce without a contract.
For most situations, no. Our generators create legally sound agreements based on proven templates. However, consider consulting an attorney if: you have significant assets at stake, one party is a public figure, the relationship involves complex dynamics (multiple parties, professional overlap), or you're in a state with unusual privacy laws. We offer free consultations to help you decide.
No. NDAs cannot legally prevent anyone from reporting crimes, cooperating with law enforcement, or testifying under subpoena. Any clause attempting to silence reports of illegal activity is void and unenforceable. Our templates explicitly exclude illegal conduct from confidentiality obligations. If you've experienced abuse, an NDA does not prevent you from seeking help or reporting to authorities.
Most relationship NDAs use a 2–5 year term for general confidentiality, with perpetual (forever) protection for intimate images and recordings. Shorter terms (1–2 years) work for casual encounters; longer terms (5+ years or perpetual) are appropriate for serious relationships or when photos/videos exist. Courts are more likely to enforce reasonable time limits than open-ended "forever" clauses for non-image content.

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