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Legal Documents for eCommerce Businesses in Ireland

Irish eCommerce businesses face strict consumer protection requirements under the Consumer Rights Act 2022 and EU distance selling regulations. Every online store needs website terms and conditions that address the 14-day cancellation right, clear returns policies, and GDPR-compliant privacy notices. With the Data Protection Commission actively enforcing GDPR against Irish online businesses, getting your legal documents right is essential for avoiding fines and building customer trust.

Documents You Need

Common Legal Mistakes in eCommerce

Missing or non-compliant returns policy

Under the Consumer Rights Directive, online customers have an automatic 14-day cooling-off period. Your website must clearly display this right, the exceptions (digital content, personalised goods, perishables), and the process for returns. Many Irish eCommerce sites either omit this entirely or state "no returns" which is unlawful for distance selling.

No GDPR privacy policy for customer data

Every eCommerce site collects personal data - names, addresses, payment details, browsing behaviour. Under GDPR, you need a privacy policy that explains your lawful basis for processing, data retention periods, third-party sharing (payment processors, delivery companies), and customer rights. This is not optional.

No supplier or fulfilment agreements

If you use third-party fulfilment, dropshipping, or payment processors, you need service agreements defining responsibilities, liability, and data processing obligations. Without these, disputes over damaged goods, delayed shipments, or data breaches become your problem alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

While not technically mandatory, trading without T&Cs means statutory defaults under the Consumer Rights Act 2022 and Sale of Goods and Supply of Services Act 1980 apply in full. These defaults are generally more favourable to consumers. Custom T&Cs let you set appropriate terms while remaining compliant.
Under the Consumer Rights Directive (transposed into Irish law by SI 207/2001), consumers who buy online have 14 calendar days to cancel their order for any reason and receive a full refund. Exceptions include digital content once downloading begins (with consent), personalised or bespoke items, sealed goods opened after delivery, and perishable goods.
Yes. Under GDPR Article 28, if a third party processes personal data on your behalf, you need a written data processing agreement. Most major platforms provide their own DPA, but you should review it and ensure your privacy policy accurately reflects these relationships.

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This is a self-service document generation tool. It does not constitute legal advice. For complex or high-value situations, we recommend consulting a solicitor.