EasySuit Trust Center
How EasySuit supports people in civil disputes
EasySuit helps people respond to debt collection lawsuits, evictions, and small-claims matters, and helps them pursue their own claims through demand letters and court filings. This page exposes only aggregate, anonymized statistics. No per-user, per-matter, or per-attorney detail ever appears here.
What EasySuit does
- Explains the lawsuit paperwork you were served, in plain language, and tracks the deadlines that come with it.
- Drafts court forms for your review: an Answer if you were sued, a statement of claim or demand letter if you are bringing a claim. You review and certify every document before it is marked final. Nothing is filed automatically.
- Flags matters that need a licensed attorney and routes them, only when you ask, through the shared attorney leads queue.
- Offers an online dispute resolution (ODR) mediation lane for matters that are better settled than litigated. You open that lane explicitly; EasySuit never moves a matter to mediation on its own.
What we are not
EasySuit is an informational tool. It is not a law firm and it does not provide legal advice.
Using EasySuit does not create an attorney-client relationship, and EasySuit does not represent you in court.
EasySuit never predicts the outcome of your case, scores your chances, or advertises win rates. A suitability flag is a measure of how well a matter fits the self-serve flow, not a case-strength score.
If your matter needs a lawyer, the right answer is a licensed attorney in your state, and the product says so instead of pretending otherwise.
Aggregate numbers
Lifetime activity
All lifetime activity counters (matters created, answer drafts generated, demand letters sent) are currently below the five-row disclosure floor. Counts publish here once each category clears the k-anonymity threshold.
Escalations
Both escalation counters (attorney escalations, ODR mediation referrals) are currently below the five-row disclosure floor. Counts publish here once each category clears the k-anonymity threshold.
How we handle your data
Consumer-owned rows
Every matter, document, deadline, and timeline row belongs to the consumer who created it. Row-level security policies in the database block any other user from reading it.
Service-role escalation writes
When you escalate a matter, the server uses a service-role client to write the lead and the timeline event. Those writes happen only on routes that have already verified you own the matter; the service role is never exposed to the browser.
Aggregate-only disclosure
The numbers on this page are platform-wide head counts with a five-row k-anonymity floor. We never publish anything that could identify a single user, matter, or attorney.
What we commit to
- EasySuit is an informational tool. It organizes documents, explains paperwork, and drafts court forms for your review. It is not a law firm and it never predicts the outcome of your case.
- Every matter, document, and deadline row is owned by the consumer who created it; row-level security policies block any other user from reading it.
- When a matter needs a licensed attorney, it routes through the shared attorney leads queue. The packet an attorney sees is only sent after the user asks for escalation.
- Mediation referrals go to the ODR lane, which the user opens explicitly. EasySuit never moves a matter to mediation on its own.
Escalation transparency
When a matter needs a lawyer, it routes to licensed attorneys through the same shared leads queue the rest of the platform uses; attorneys see the matter packet only after the user asks for escalation. Mediation goes through the ODR lane, which the user opens explicitly. EasySuit does not sell leads, does not rank attorneys by payment, and does not refer matters without a user action.
Responsible disclosure
If you believe you have found a vulnerability that affects EasySuit users, please report it through our responsible- disclosure page at /security/family. We respond within two business days.
Stats refresh hourly via ISR; any counter below 5 is collapsed to 'below disclosure threshold' for k-anonymity. No per-user or per-attorney detail is ever exposed.
We also publish aggregate statistics for:


