How to Write a Privacy Policy for Your Shopify Store

If you run a Shopify store, you legally need a privacy policy — and it's not optional. Whether you're selling handmade candles or running a seven-figure dropshipping business, privacy laws apply to you the moment you collect customer data.

The good news: you don't need to pay a lawyer or spend hours writing one from scratch. This guide explains exactly what your Shopify privacy policy needs to include and how to create one in minutes for free.

In a hurry? Skip the reading and generate your Shopify privacy policy free in 60 seconds using our AI tool.

Why Does Your Shopify Store Need a Privacy Policy?

Three reasons you can't skip this:

  1. It's the law. GDPR (Europe), CCPA (California), and privacy laws in Canada, Australia, and the UK all require you to tell customers what data you collect and how you use it. Shopify stores collect a lot of data — names, addresses, email addresses, payment information, and browsing behavior.
  2. Shopify requires it. Shopify's own Terms of Service require merchants to have a privacy policy. If you use Shopify Payments, it's non-negotiable.
  3. Customers expect it. Shoppers check for privacy policies before trusting a store with their credit card. No policy = lost sales.

What Your Shopify Privacy Policy Must Include

1. What data you collect

Be specific about every type of data your store collects:

2. Why you collect it

Explain the purpose behind each type of data — processing orders, sending shipping updates, marketing emails (if you send them), improving your site.

3. Who you share it with

You almost certainly share data with third parties. List them all:

4. Customer rights

If you sell to customers in the EU or California, you must tell them they have the right to access, correct, or delete their data. Include a contact email for these requests.

5. How long you keep data

Explain your data retention policy — for example, order data kept for 5 years for accounting purposes, email marketing data kept until unsubscribed.

6. Cookie policy

If your store uses any tracking pixels or analytics cookies (and it almost certainly does), you need to disclose this. Consider adding a separate cookie policy or dedicated section.

7. Contact information

Include an email address where customers can reach you with privacy questions. This is required by GDPR.

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How to Add a Privacy Policy to Shopify

Once you have your policy text, adding it to Shopify is simple:

  1. In your Shopify admin, go to Settings → Policies
  2. Find the "Privacy policy" section
  3. Paste your policy text into the editor
  4. Click Save

Shopify automatically links your privacy policy in the checkout footer once it's added. You can also link to it from your store footer navigation for maximum visibility.

GDPR Requirements for Shopify Stores Selling to Europe

If any of your customers are based in the European Union — even if you're not located there — GDPR applies to you. Your Shopify privacy policy must additionally cover:

CCPA Requirements for Shopify Stores Selling to California

If you sell to customers in California and meet certain thresholds (over $25M revenue, or handling data of 100,000+ consumers), CCPA applies. Your policy must include:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use Shopify's default privacy policy template?

Shopify provides a basic template, but it's intentionally generic and may not cover your specific apps, marketing tools, or third-party services. A customized policy that reflects your actual business is always better — and more legally sound.

Do I need a privacy policy if I'm just starting out with no sales yet?

Yes. The moment your store is live and collecting any data — including just visitor analytics — your privacy obligations kick in. It's easier to add a policy before you launch than to scramble after a customer complaint.

How often should I update my Shopify privacy policy?

Update it whenever you add new apps, start using new marketing tools, change how you use customer data, or start selling to new countries. A good rule of thumb is to review it every 6-12 months.

Is a free AI-generated privacy policy legally valid?

Yes — what matters is the content, not who wrote it. As long as the policy accurately reflects your data practices and meets regulatory requirements, it's legally valid. For complex situations (healthcare products, financial services), consult a lawyer.

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