Express · The "draft this for me" letter
A formal dispute letter, drafted in 90 seconds.
Billing disputes. Insurance claim denials. Security deposit fights. Push back on a charge or a decision — with a properly structured letter that creates a paper trail, names what you want, and signals the escalation path without bluffing.
$9.99 · one-shot
~90 seconds
Formal letter + evidence checklist
Escalation path included
Built for these disputes
If it's on this list, this is the tool.
Anything else, or anything where the stakes are high enough that "draft a letter" isn't enough — see the lawyer callout below.
Billing disputeCredit card, utility, subscription overcharge
Medical billWrong charge, code error, insurance not applied
Insurance denialClaim denied — formal first appeal
Security depositDispute landlord deductions
Landlord disputeRepairs, lease misinterpretation, deposit
Service complaintFormal escalation past customer service
Parking / trafficContest a ticket or citation
Refund demandAfter being declined by customer service
Subscription cancel"I tried to cancel and was still charged"
Warranty claimManufacturer or retailer pushback
What you get
Five things, properly done.
01
The letter
Formal markdown letter: sender block, date, recipient, RE: line, body, signature. Your facts only — never invented. Missing facts left as [BRACKETS] to fill.
02
Evidence checklist
3–6 specific items to attach as exhibits, based on the facts you described. So you don't send the letter and then realize you forgot the invoice.
03
Key phrases
3–5 specific sentences from your letter that do load-bearing work — and why they matter. Helpful if you want to adjust the tone.
04
Escalation path
3 concrete next steps with response windows. If they don't respond in N days → do this. If still nothing → do that. So you're not stuck after one letter.
05
When to lawyer up
Specific thresholds for THIS dispute type. Plus a confidence note about what we couldn't verify — state-specific deadlines, statute references, etc.
$9.99
One-time. Letter + evidence + escalation in ~90 seconds.
When to skip this tool and get an attorney.
This tool is built for first-contact, lower-stakes disputes where the value is "stop staring at a blank page and create a paper trail". It's the wrong tool when:
- The dollar amount in dispute is large enough that the cost of a 30-minute consultation is worth it (typically $5K+, or anything affecting your housing or job)
- Court action is already involved, or you've been served with a notice
- The dispute involves potential discrimination, harassment, or retaliation
- This is a habitability issue with a landlord and conditions are dangerous
- The counterparty has already brought their lawyer into it
- You need to interpret a specific clause in a written contract
For any of the above, talk to a lawyer. Most state bars offer free or low-cost referral services. Many disputes have free legal aid options based on income.
FAQ
Common questions.
Is this legal advice?
No. Adytum is not a law firm. This is a template-drafting tool. We don't establish an attorney-client relationship, we don't review your specific situation against state law, and we don't represent you. The output is a starting draft that you should review and adapt.
Will it make stuff up?
No. The model is instructed to use only the facts you provide. If you don't tell it the invoice date, it leaves [INVOICE DATE — fill in] in the letter. Better an obvious gap than a fabricated date that could undermine your case later.
Does it cite specific laws?
No, by design. Statutes vary by jurisdiction and the model can't verify which apply to you. The letter is built on the facts and reasonable demands — if you have a specific statute that applies, you can add it. The confidence note flags this.
What tones can I pick?
Firm-polite (default — first contact), firm-direct (you've already been polite once), or formal-escalation (notice of intent to file with a regulator / take next steps).
What if I need to refund?
Email hello@adytum.agency within 7 days — no questions asked.