States the written contract is the whole deal — prior promises don’t count.
An entire-agreement (or integration) clause says the signed document supersedes every earlier email, promise, or verbal assurance. Anything a salesperson told you that is not in the writing usually cannot be enforced afterward.
“This Agreement constitutes the entire understanding and supersedes all prior discussions.”
Before you sign, Main AI reads the actual contract and flags where a clause like this shifts risk onto you — in plain language, tied to the exact wording.
Analyze my document free →This clause is why “but they told me…” rarely wins. If a representation matters, get it into the document itself. Watch for it alongside a “no reliance” clause, which further bars claims based on anything said outside the contract.
See this in your own document: run a free analysis — findings quote the exact language.
“Each party acknowledges it has not relied on any representation not expressly set forth herein.”
That “no reliance” line is the teeth: it forecloses claims about side promises. Before signing, make sure every assurance you care about appears in the text.