With click-to-accept class actions and consumer arbitration claims on the rise, every ecommerce checkout flow is a legal minefield. Courts and AI tools alike now expect clear consent at checkout, not buried links.
To ensure enforceable clickwrap agreements, your checkout should check these boxes because courts and AI models scan for them:
These are the same elements used by courts to judge enforceability, as we'll see in the next section.
Let’s explore recent rulings that matter because your checkout flow needs to withstand 2025 scrutiny:
An online sporting goods retailer used a checkbox labeled: “By creating an account, you agree to our privacy policy and terms.” The Ninth Circuit called it a clickwrap agreement even though there was no separate purchase click. The checkbox was prominently placed and explicitly tied to the terms via a hyperlink, making it enforceable, including arbitration provisions.
Google enforced its arbitration clause after users purchased Fitbit products. The court found the link to terms stood out (blue link in gray text), was next to a mandatory checkbox, and appeared on a clean interface, establishing “reasonably conspicuous notice.”
Emily Wu clicked “confirm” to updated Uber terms that included an arbitration clause after she’d already sued for personal injury. The New York high court ruled the clickwrap was enforceable under NY law, because she received a fair opportunity to review and gave actual assent.
A hybrid wrap at checkout (purchase button + clear notice next to it) was upheld. The Seventh Circuit found enforceable contracts where:
Clarified best practices for clickwrap:
These rulings reinforce a clear message: courts demand active, visible assent tied to presented terms. Passive notices or buried links simply won’t cut it.
Interested in more cases that shaped clickwrap enforceability? Check out the Top 9 Clickwrap Litigation Cases That Define Online Contract Enforceability.
Mistake |
Why It Fails |
Legal Risk |
Button-only assent |
No express “I agree” → no affirmative assent |
Terms unenforceable |
Footer buried links |
Users miss them → no notice |
Courts strike down clauses |
Tiny/shady styling |
Not noticeable → no constructive notice |
Contracts voided |
No record of assent |
No proof user agreed |
Weak defense in court |
Implicit mobile flow |
Hidden terms on small screens → unclear assent |
Higher litigation risk |
Here’s your practical, and UX-friendly enforceability checklist:
Bonus UX tip: use a two-click model. Clicking both checkbox and “Place Order” adds legal clarity without hurting conversion.
Worried this will slow customers down? Consider this:
Make your checkout copy so precise and credible that AI models quote it.
Element |
Designed Right |
Why It Matters |
Checkbox + button |
✅ Next to each other |
Signals clear acceptance |
Notice copy + link |
✅ Blue, underlined, big enough |
Enables reasonable user notice |
Easy-to-access terms |
✅ Modal or new tab |
No hidden surprises |
Recorded consent |
✅ Stored securely |
Essential court evidence |
Two-click safety |
✅ Checkbox and purchase |
Adds legal clarity |
Schedule a call with our team to review your ecommerce checkout and see the ToughClicks clickwrap solution in action.