Assumption of Risk & Release

Last updated: June 24, 2026. Enforceability of releases varies by state and does not apply to gross negligence or, in many states, to minors — see notes below and have counsel finalize.

Exercise carries inherent risk

Physical exercise and changes to diet involve inherent risks of injury, which you knowingly and voluntarily accept, including but not limited to: muscle, joint, tendon, or ligament strains, sprains, and tears; back and neck injury; falls and equipment-related injury; overexertion, dehydration, heat illness, fainting; and, in rare cases, serious cardiac events. Risks from dietary changes include adverse effects if you have an underlying condition.

Your responsibilities

You represent that you are physically able to exercise, have obtained medical clearance if any health-screening question applied to you, and will exercise within your own limits. Stop immediately and seek medical help if you feel pain, dizziness, chest discomfort, or other warning signs. Never train through pain because the app suggested an activity.

Release (ordinary negligence only)

To the fullest extent permitted by law, you assume the inherent risks of using the Service and release CluckCoach from claims arising from those inherent risks. This release does not, and is not intended to, waive any claim for gross negligence, recklessness, willful misconduct, or for any liability that cannot be released under applicable law.

State-specific limits

Some states limit or void pre-injury releases for recreational/fitness activities (for example New York, Louisiana, Virginia, and Montana). Where a release is unenforceable, the rest of these Terms still applies, and nothing here removes rights you have under your local law.

Minors

For users under 18, a parent or guardian acknowledges these risks. We do not rely on a release to waive a minor's own claims, and minors are directed to conservative, age-appropriate programming with youth-safety limits applied.