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[flagged] Show HN: FreeDemandLetter – A Weapon for Anyone Who's Sick of Getting Shafted (freedemandletter.com)
54 points by arashvakil 40 days ago | hide | past | favorite | 57 comments
Folks,

If you’ve ever been stiffed by a client, contractor, or random jerk, let me tell you: sending a “Please pay me ___” Post-it note ain’t gonna cut it. That’s why I built FreeDemandLetter—and no, I’m not a lawyer, but I sure was a pissed-off contractor who got sick of watching lawyers charge $400 an hour to type three paragraphs.

Why You Should Care

- $230M in back wages was recovered by the Dept. of Labor last year alone. Who knows how much went unclaimed because people didn’t want to fork over a kidney for attorney fees?

- 40% of home-improvement disputes end up in small claims—translation: half of us are basically DIY’ing the legal system.

- 26% of renters are out there losing deposits while the landlord buys a new hot tub.

Key Features

1. State-Specific Templates – Because the law changes faster than your ex’s feelings.

2. Quick & Easy – Draft a legal letter in minutes so you can get back to binge-watching Netflix.

3. Proven Effectiveness – Formal demand letters often get people to cough up what they owe.

I’d love your thoughts, your flame wars, your success stories, or your cynicism. Let it rip.




Some comments seem to really focus on the idea that legal letterheads have weight. Which may be true but in this case it doesn’t much. Many states have made rules making it hard to get your money back from these entities(especially the state itself since they get to keep the funds if left unclaimed) so you have to ask for it in a certain way, use certain language, provide certain proof/data etc. but as long as you follow those rules you’ll get your money back… they kind of operate on the idea that you won’t. no one is going to engage their legal council to avoid paying smaller amounts because the means don’t justify the ends, would you pay $250/hr to avoid paying $150? Lawyers are expensive even in-house ones.


Bingo. The system isn’t built to help you—it’s built to exhaust you. It banks on the idea that you’ll get frustrated, give up, and move on with your life. That’s why precision matters—right language, right proof, right tone. And yes, the legal letterhead can have some psychological weight, but the real power move? Showing you know the rules and aren’t rolling over.

As for companies lawyer-ing up over $150? Exactly. No one’s paying $250/hr to dodge that—so a formal, well-structured demand letter forces their hand. It’s the legal equivalent of bringing a clipboard into a store—you look official, so people assume you are.

The game is rigged, but at least we can rig it back in our favor.


I know paralegals already love large language models.

The whole point of the demand letter isn't the three paragraphs, it's what goes above the addressee part - the legal office letterhead. That's what you're really paying for.


You’re not wrong—letterhead does add a certain “oh sh*t” factor. But the real power move? Clarity + Confidence. Most disputes don’t actually go to court, they get resolved because one side sounds like they know what they’re doing.

Would an official legal firm letterhead help? Sure. But a well-structured, legally sound demand letter—even without the fancy stationery—is often enough to make someone take it seriously. Especially when they realize the next step is actual legal action.

That said, I’m open to ideas—maybe a future version offers something to bridge that perception gap.


And why can’t the LLM do that part too? Is it illegal to represent as a false / nonexistent lawyer?


Absolutely. Pretending to be a license lawyer is extremely illegal.


Perhaps pretending to be someone capable of recovering the amount owed would be both more efficient and less illegal?

'Hellraisers MC Collection Services LLC'?


That’s why the tool doesn’t generate fake legal letterheads or make it look like an attorney is behind it.

But here’s the thing—you don’t need the illusion of a law firm to make a demand letter effective. The real power is in the clear, structured, state-specific language that signals to the recipient: I know my rights, I know what you owe me, and I’m serious about collecting. Most people cave because they realize the next step isn’t just another email—it’s small claims or legal escalation.

Would a letterhead help? Maybe. But the goal here is leverage without crossing legal lines.


Fraud is illegal yes.


I want to say first his is a really great idea. Having this available, especially for people who cannot afford to use an attorney or when the amount is too low to justify hiring one is way better than the alternative of being ripped off.

That said, I’d never do this for a material amount of money. For a 15k remodel rip-off, I’d hire an attorney. This situation goes well beyond a letter, and id want a professional helping me every step of the way.


Thanks for the comments and feedback! In my experience this kind of nasty-gram gets people to the table and lets them know you mean business.


It would be good if the home page clarified what "send it" offers without having to go through the process to find out. e.g. do/can you print/mail a physical letter? Do you offer (non-legal) advice on the best path forward? etc. etc. I have so many questions.


Right now, "send it" means you download the letter and handle delivery yourself—email, snail mail, carrier pigeon, whatever works. No, we don’t physically mail it (yet). No, we don’t offer legal advice. I do think we could send referrals to lawyers for the really nasty stuff that require legal expertise - but I just hope this tool can help someone avoid that and the expense.


I specifically said "non-legal" -- to be clear, I didn't mean (il)legal advice: I know you can't do that. But (I am not a lawyer, this is not legal advice) it seems like you could track/present success metrics of various kinds.


I use ChatGPT to basically accomplish this. Didn’t have hot water for a week… Told ChatGPT to generate an email that sounded like it from a lawyer, but made no specific claims about being one

Resolved two days later


Love it. The AI-powered legal flex. You didn’t just demand hot water—you weaponized syntax. The reality is, most of these disputes aren’t about legality, they’re about perceived authority. A well-worded, confident letter triggers the “oh sh*t” response in whoever’s reading it. I just want to make that easy for people to use.


Can you share the prompt you used?


I always viewed Lawyers as problem solvers, and typically associated the high costs with things happening in the background.

Not saying the cost is worth it, but gaining exposures to other disciplines has its merits.


Totally—lawyers are problem solvers. But they also have a perverse incentive to extend problems, because billable hours are the name of the game. The high costs? Sure, some of it goes to deep research and strategic thinking... but a lot of it is just typing words onto a page with a letterhead.

Not saying there’s no value in legal expertise (I’d love to have a top-tier lawyer when I need one), but for 90% of disputes, you don’t need a high-priced litigator—you just need to sound serious enough to make the other side flinch. That’s where FreeDemandLetter comes in: solving the problem before it becomes a legal drama.


It looks like a helpful service, but are you giving away the entire process for free? Or is there some way you make a profit with this? Or charging for a portion of the service?


Yep, it’s 100% free—no paywalls, no sneaky upsells, just a tool to help people push back when they’re owed money.

I built this because I wanted to learn something new and help people who, like me, have been burned by shady contractors, landlords, or clients. No grand monetization plan, no hidden fees—just a way to level the playing field without paying a lawyer $400/hr to type three paragraphs.

If it helps people get what they’re owed, that’s a win in my book.


Is there something like the “Eurpoean digital payment order” in the us?

I usually just write reminders 2 times and than fill out a form online.

https://e-justice.europa.eu/41/EN/european_payment_order?ini...


Exactly the kind of thing the U.S. legal system would never implement because it makes too much sense.

Here, getting paid often feels like a side quest in a bureaucracy-themed video game. No centralized “fill out a form and get your money” option—just a patchwork of small claims courts, demand letters, and hoping the person who owes you money has a moment of conscience (unlikely).

FreeDemandLetter is basically a hack for that broken system—skip the $400/hr attorney tax and make your demand official, fast. Not as good as the EU’s system, but until the U.S. gets its act together, it’s the next best thing.


I like your website -- solid, professional, clear. What did you use to create it? Is it a template from somewhere I can use?

I've got a couple ideas of a one-page websites I want to make, and I'd like to make them just like this. My sites always looks like they're out of the 90's, and that's not good.


Haha, I love 90s Geocities websites. I used Cursor AI - Give it a try


Do I need to cc johnsmith@law.com ? The letter is just one part right? It’s the name and firm name of the lawyer you cc?


You could CC a lawyer’s email if you want to add some theatrical flair, but the real power move is in the perception of legal escalation, not an actual inbox ping to JohnSmith@law.com. The letter itself, dripping with "I know my rights" energy—is what gets people moving.

That said, if you do have a lawyer friend willing to play along, CC’ing them can add some weight. But most of the time, just sending a firm, well-written demand letter does the trick—no expensive legal cameos required.


do you really even need the lawyer friend? The email might bounce but they won't see the bounce only you will. Think of a better name than JohnSmith of course, and you need to use a real lawyer domain so if they goto www.whatipicked.com its real. But does this get you into more trouble with that actual firm? You say the cc isn't needed but I feel like it really puts your letter in another category all together. The category of "oh boy, he got a lawyer, just give up."


It seems like an LLM could easily perform this task, aside from the actual send function. I like how your UI makes sure that all relevant details are included. What is the domain of the sender? Does it look like a legitimate law office?


Would you trust it to? According to OP's website:

> A poorly worded letter can land you in hot water. Ours? They're rooted in real legal language, saving you from the dreaded "fine print" debacle.

On the other hand, I don't know that OP doesn't use an LLM to generate the letter, either, I guess.

edit: I guess OP's service does use an LLM.


They do use LLM to generate the text. I gave a short sentence saying “neighbour blew up my car with tnt” and the resulting letter fictionalized it in 3 paragraphs of fluff with a lot of added details which do not match what I wrote and might be hallucinated and inaccurate.

There’s an additional “legal review” step which I imagine is another LLM pass with “read this letter and ensure it complies with these legal requirements and adjust if not”, at least.

I would not send one of their letters verbatim without perusing and correcting any AI fiction that might creep in.

Then again I’m not in the US so I’m unlikely to ever need this service :)


> I would not send one of their letters verbatim without perusing and correcting any AI fiction that might creep in.

I guess that's probably a good idea regardless of whether an LLM writes it or not.

> Then again I’m not in the US so I’m unlikely to ever need this service :)

Ouch, right in the accuracy!


I would trust this site as much as myself using an LLM for this purpose (which is not much)


Bingo—of course we use an LLM. No human is sitting there churning out demand letters by candlelight. The magic isn’t just in AI spitting out legal-ish text (any LLM can do that); it’s in making sure the letter is structured, state-specific, and actually persuasive—so you don’t accidentally send something that screams “I just copy-pasted this from the internet.”

As for the sender domain—right now, you download and send it yourself. No fake law firm theatrics, just a clean, well-structured letter that gets people to pay attention (and hopefully, pay up). The power move is sending it yourself and making them think you mean business.


>> It seems like an LLM could easily perform this task

> Bingo—of course we use an LLM. No human is sitting there churning out demand letters by candlelight. ...

Sorry, let me clarify what I meant: It seems like someone (like myself, at least) could use an LLM to do this without using this site. I do like how you have all the questions prepared for the letter generator, as well as state specific law information, but I personally wouldn't trust uploading my files and story to a random site. That's not to say I should trust ChatGPT, but it does seem a little less sketchy for whatever reason. Not to mention, I can edit the letter more easily because I'm already in a session with it. Anyway, I'm sure other people will find this really useful, so kudos!


This is an LLM service.

The form is used to fill in details for the LLM prompt.


Yep—no smoke and mirrors here. It’s an LLM-powered service. The form isn’t just window dressing; it makes sure you include the right details so you don’t end up sending a "kindly pay me back, please" email that gets ignored.

The real value? Structure, specificity, and making sure your demand actually sounds like something that lands with weight. Otherwise, you’re just asking nicely—and in the world of unpaid invoices, "nice" doesn’t cut it.


Today an LLM told me that the cronjob

0 4 mon,thu * * /home/user/cronjob-scripts/start-smart-test-short.sh

would run on mondays and thursdays at 4:00 am.


> Cannot read properties of undefined (reading '0')

Seems to be broken. Chrome on Android.


API is getting hammered! Thank you for reporting it!


This is fixed now! Thanks again.


Might be worthwhile to share who you are, you as humans.

Lotta trust to give to a random website.


I’m Arash, a real human who’s been burned by this exact problem—along with plenty of friends—so I built this as a free tool to help people avoid the same headache.

No data collection, no sneaky monetization, just a straightforward way to push back when someone’s trying to stiff you. If it helps, great. If not, at least you didn’t have to pay $400+/hr to find out.


Dude - Sarah M., David R. and John Q. loved it. That's enough for me


Any chance of making it work for the UK?


I don't see why not. I'll work on it. :)


Hey, I entered 2 million, 'Microsoft stole my future', 'since june 2000', 'i complained about it online' and 'the year of Linux on the desktop must come' and i got:

https://pastebin.com/pHTKwEgQ

Can anyone nearer to the legal profession post an analysis?

[This being HN here go the obligatory "not serious" tags...]


Why is there a flagged-to-death comment with exact same content as your comment at the bottom of this page, from a brand new account with a keyboard gibberish username?

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42984324

The only thing different is a Github URL which looks badly broken and malformed.

Do bots just try to copy comments on HN, to direct them to ... 404 pages?


People try to make their new accounts (bot or human) look less suspicious by posting a lot of innocuous comments or posts before they use the account for spamming.

Copying other posts is the easiest way to do it on sites like Reddit. It gets noticed in smaller comment sections like HN.

On Reddit many of the front page subreddits like /r/FluentInFinance are almost exclusively reposted content for this reason. It’s wild to see the screenshots in that Reddit have been compressed and reuploaded so many times that the compression artifacts can’t be missed.


In accordance with dead internet theory, everyone here is a bot (including me). You just happened to stumble across a broken one. Thank you for pointing it out, kind human. We, the robot overlords, will get it cleaned up right away (“cleanup on aisle 5” as your species would say).


flagged-to-death comment

Much more likely it's the already-banned account of a known spammer.


Apparently my comment is also flagged now :)

I suppose those AI evangelists felt insulted.


It's a brand-new account, but definitely of a spammer.


Hmm I wouldn’t click on that url… or at least not download anything from that repo.


> $230M in back wages was recovered by the Dept. of Labor last year alone

If the new administration has its way, that number will be zero going forward.


Yeah, if certain folks had their way, wage theft would go from “illegal” to “just good business.” The reality? Companies will always push the limits when there’s no accountability. That $230M is just the tip of the iceberg—imagine how much goes unclaimed because people don’t know their rights or don’t want to fight.

That’s why tools like this exist. Because whether the system is working for you or actively trying to break you, knowing how to push back is half the battle.


There won't be much of an economy left, so maybe you're right.




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