Termly is good at privacy policies, cookie consent and a consent-management platform. But the newer non-privacy rules — AI Act content labeling, GPSR product safety, FTC reviews, auto-renewal — sit outside its scope. RuleGoose is built for exactly those newer rules — and it leads with a free instant checker and one 0–100 score instead of a signup wall.
| Capability | RuleGoose | Termly |
|---|---|---|
| Free instant checker, no signup | Yes | No |
| One 0–100 compliance score for your whole business | Yes | No |
| GDPR privacy policy & cookie consent | Yes | Yes |
| US state privacy (CCPA/CPRA) | Yes | Yes |
| EU AI Act content labeling (Art. 50) | Yes | No |
| EU product safety (GPSR) | Yes | No |
| FTC fake-reviews & endorsements | Yes | No |
| European Accessibility Act / WCAG | Yes | Sometimes |
| US auto-renewal (state ARLs + ROSCA) | Yes | No |
| CAN-SPAM email & TCPA SMS marketing | Yes | No |
| PCI DSS payment security | Yes | No |
| Ongoing monitoring + alerts when rules change | Yes | Sometimes |
RuleGoose and Termly often solve different problems — plenty of businesses run Termly for privacy policies, cookie consent and a consent-management platform and RuleGoose for the newer enforcement areas. This isn't a knock on Termly; it's about which gap you're filling.
Optional Rule-Watch monitoring $9/mo. Everything findable & fixable for free, no signup.
Policy generator + cookie consent. Tiers gate cookie scans, banners and policy count.
If your main need is privacy policies, cookie consent and a consent-management platform, Termly is a solid, dedicated choice. If you're an online seller or creator who also has to worry about the newer rules — AI content labeling, product safety, fake-review and endorsement rules, auto-renewal laws, accessibility — RuleGoose checks those for free and gives you one score across all of them. The two work well together.
Competitor details are based on public information as of June 2026 and may change — check Termly's site for current specifics. RuleGoose isn't affiliated with Termly. Informational only, not legal advice.