Legal

Terms of Service

Last updated: 4 July 2026

The terms that govern your use of this website and the design and development services we provide.

Acceptance

By accessing this website or engaging Qweblo for services, you agree to these Terms. If you do not agree, please do not use the website or our services.

Our services

We provide web design, development and related services as described in a separate written proposal, quote or statement of work agreed with you, which forms part of these Terms.

Client responsibilities

You agree to provide accurate information, timely feedback, and any content, access or approvals we need to deliver the work. Delays in providing these may affect timelines.

You confirm that any material you supply does not infringe the rights of others and may lawfully be used in your project.

Fees and payment

Fees, milestones and payment schedules are set out in your proposal or quote. Invoices are payable by the due date stated. We may pause work on overdue accounts.

Intellectual property

On full payment, ownership of the final deliverables created specifically for you transfers to you, except for third-party assets, open-source components and our pre-existing tools, which remain under their own licences.

We may showcase the work in our portfolio unless we agree otherwise in writing.

Warranties and disclaimers

We deliver services with reasonable skill and care. Except as expressly stated, the website and services are provided “as is” without further warranties. See also our Disclaimer.

Limitation of liability

To the extent permitted by law, Qweblo is not liable for indirect or consequential losses, and our total liability arising from an engagement is limited to the fees paid for that engagement.

Termination

Either party may end an engagement in the manner set out in the applicable proposal. Fees for work completed up to termination remain payable.

Governing law

These Terms are governed by the laws of India, and the courts of India have jurisdiction over any dispute, subject to any specific dispute-resolution terms in your proposal.