Google · Google Analytics Terms of Service · View original document ↗

Mutual Liability Cap and Consequential Damages Exclusion

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What it is

The agreement caps Google's total liability to the account holder at the greater of $500 or fees paid in the preceding 12 months, and excludes all liability for indirect, incidental, special, consequential, exemplary, or punitive damages including loss of profits, revenues, data, or goodwill.

This analysis describes what Google's agreement states, permits, or reserves. It does not constitute a legal determination about enforceability. Regulatory applicability and practical outcomes may vary by jurisdiction, enforcement context, and individual circumstances. Read our methodology

ConductAtlas Analysis

Why it matters (compliance & governance perspective)

This provision establishes a significant asymmetry in financial exposure: for account holders using the free tier of Google Analytics (GA4 Properties and UA Properties under 10 million Hits), Google's maximum liability under the agreement is $500. The mutual consequential damages exclusion also applies to the account holder's claims against Google, regardless of the magnitude of business impact from any service failure or data loss.

Interpretive note: Enforceability of this liability cap may vary by jurisdiction, particularly in EU member states where statutory frameworks may establish non-waivable liability for data processing failures independent of contractual limitations.

Consumer impact (what this means for users)

Under this clause, the agreement limits Google's financial liability for any breach or service failure to a maximum of $500 for free-tier account holders, and excludes recovery for loss of data, profits, revenues, or goodwill. This liability allocation applies to the business account holder rather than to end-user website visitors.

How other platforms handle this

Synthesia Medium

To the maximum extent permitted by applicable law, in no event will Synthesia's aggregate liability to you under or in connection with this Agreement exceed the total fees paid or payable by you to Synthesia in the twelve (12) month period immediately preceding the event giving rise to the claim. In...

Google AI Studio Medium

Google's total liability to you for any claims under these terms, including for any implied warranties, is limited to the amount you paid us to use the Gemini API (or, if we choose, to supplying you the services again) in the 12 months before the breach.

Duolingo Medium

TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, DUOLINGO SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, OR ANY LOSS OF PROFITS OR REVENUES, WHETHER INCURRED DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY, OR ANY LOSS OF DATA, USE, GOODWILL, OR OTHER INTANGIBLE LOSSES, RESUL...

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▸ View Original Clause Language DOCUMENT RECORD
"
GOOGLE AND GOOGLE AFFILIATES SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR ANY INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR PUNITIVE DAMAGES, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF PROFITS, REVENUES, DATA, GOODWILL, OR OTHER INTANGIBLE LOSSES (EVEN IF GOOGLE OR THE GOOGLE AFFILIATES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES) ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT. EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN SECTION 15, THE TOTAL LIABILITY OF GOOGLE AND GOOGLE AFFILIATES ARISING OUT OF OR RELATING TO THIS AGREEMENT IS LIMITED TO THE GREATER OF: (A) $500; OR (B) THE FEES, IF ANY, PAID BY YOU IN THE PREVIOUS 12 MONTHS.

— Excerpt from Google's Google Analytics Terms of Service

ConductAtlas Analysis

Institutional analysis (Compliance & governance intelligence)

1. REGULATORY LANDSCAPE: Liability limitation clauses are generally enforced under US contract law when clearly stated, though some state consumer protection statutes and international frameworks may limit their application. EU jurisdictions may assess liability caps against GDPR provisions, which establish non-waivable data subject rights and data controller liability that cannot be fully contracted away. The FTC Act does not directly govern contractual liability caps between commercial parties. 2. GOVERNANCE EXPOSURE: Medium. For businesses relying on Google Analytics for operational decision-making, the $500 liability cap for free-tier users means the agreement provides essentially no meaningful financial recourse for data loss, service unavailability, or erroneous reporting that causes business harm. This should be factored into risk assessments for operational dependency on the service. 3. JURISDICTION FLAGS: EU/EEA entities should note that GDPR Article 82 establishes non-waivable liability for data processors that fail to comply with GDPR obligations, which may operate alongside or independently of this contractual cap. In some EU member states, courts may assess the enforceability of liability exclusions against statutory consumer and commercial protection frameworks. The provision is most clearly applicable to US-based commercial relationships. 4. CONTRACT AND VENDOR IMPLICATIONS: The $500 liability cap represents a standard commercial limitation for free digital services. Organizations for whom Google Analytics data is operationally critical should assess whether this risk allocation is acceptable or whether backup analytics, data export, or alternative arrangements are warranted. The provision does not assert any indemnification by Google for third-party claims arising from service failures. 5. COMPLIANCE CONSIDERATIONS: Legal teams conducting vendor risk assessments should document the liability cap in their risk registers and assess operational dependencies on Google Analytics data for decision-making, reporting, or regulatory compliance purposes. Where Google Analytics data informs regulatory reporting or customer-facing representations, alternative data sources or validation mechanisms may be warranted.

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Applicable regulations

FTC Act Section 5
United States Federal

Provision details

Document information
Document
Google Analytics Terms of Service
Entity
Google
Document last updated
May 20, 2026
Tracking information
First tracked
May 20, 2026
Last verified
May 20, 2026
Record ID
CA-P-012640
Document ID
CA-D-00900
Evidence Provenance
Source URL
Wayback Machine
Content hash (SHA-256)
21ea24be1a4312bcc179ce853db6df37f6087cc8950fc43206a729dba6ec1c02
Analysis generated
May 20, 2026 23:48 UTC
Methodology
Evidence
✓ Snapshot stored   ✓ Hash verified
Citation Record
Entity: Google
Document: Google Analytics Terms of Service
Record ID: CA-P-012640
Captured: 2026-05-20 23:48:18 UTC
SHA-256: 21ea24be1a4312bc…
URL: https://conductatlas.com/platform/google/google-analytics-terms-of-service/mutual-liability-cap-and-consequential-damages-exclusion/
Accessed: June 8, 2026
Permanent archival reference. Stable identifier suitable for legal filings, compliance documentation, and research citation.
Classification
Severity
Medium
Categories

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does Google's Mutual Liability Cap and Consequential Damages Exclusion clause do?

This provision establishes a significant asymmetry in financial exposure: for account holders using the free tier of Google Analytics (GA4 Properties and UA Properties under 10 million Hits), Google's maximum liability under the agreement is $500. The mutual consequential damages exclusion also applies to the account holder's claims against Google, regardless of the magnitude of business impact from any service …

How does this clause affect you?

Under this clause, the agreement limits Google's financial liability for any breach or service failure to a maximum of $500 for free-tier account holders, and excludes recovery for loss of data, profits, revenues, or goodwill. This liability allocation applies to the business account holder rather than to end-user website visitors.

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No. ConductAtlas is an independent monitoring service. We are not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Google.