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Business & Contracts · Free case check · No obligation

A deal is a deal — enforce it.

When the other side breaks an agreement or claims you did, the contract’s words and your state’s law decide who is right. An attorney can evaluate exactly where you stand.

Free to youLicensed attorney reviewHandled with care

Sound familiar?

Work done, payment missing

Unpaid invoices and completed work without compensation are among the most common — and most winnable — contract claims.

Accused of a breach you dispute

Defenses may exist: the other side’s prior breach, impossibility, waiver, or terms that don’t say what they claim.

A handshake deal gone wrong

Oral and informal agreements can be enforceable — emails, texts, and performance often prove the terms.

How an attorney can help

  • Review the agreement and evaluate the strength of each side’s position
  • Send demands that get taken seriously
  • Pursue damages, specific performance, or other remedies the contract and law provide
  • Defend you against breach claims and assert your counterclaims

Worth knowing

Contract outcomes turn on the written terms, the parties’ conduct, and state doctrines like material breach and mitigation. Limitations periods for contract claims vary by state and by whether the agreement was written or oral. An attorney can usually tell you quickly whether a claim or defense is worth pursuing.

General information only — not legal advice, and not a prediction about any specific case. An attorney licensed in your state can evaluate your situation.

How it works

Free, private, and finished in about two minutes.

Tell us what happened

A short set of questions about your situation — no cost, no commitment.

We check the basics

We confirm essentials like whether a participating attorney serves your state and case type.

A licensed attorney reviews it

If an attorney takes your inquiry, they may contact you to evaluate your situation.

Common questions

Nothing was in writing. Do I have any recourse?

Often yes — many oral agreements are enforceable, and communications and performance can establish the terms. Certain contract types must be written, which an attorney can evaluate.

The contract has an arbitration clause. What does that change?

It usually means disputes go to arbitration rather than court, with its own procedures and deadlines. An attorney can evaluate the clause’s scope and represent you in the process.

How much does this service cost?

Nothing — CaseSolo Connect is free for people looking for a lawyer. Participating attorneys pay us for advertising, which is why this site is attorney advertising. Whether and how you would pay an attorney is between you and any attorney you choose to hire.

Is this legal advice?

No. Nothing on this site is legal advice, and using it does not create an attorney-client relationship. We are a paid attorney matching and advertising service — not a law firm and not a lawyer referral service.

Who sees my information?

Your contact details go only to the attorney who takes your inquiry — we do not sell your information to lists or send it to multiple firms. Our privacy policy describes exactly how your information is handled.

See where you stand — free

A few questions, about two minutes. A licensed attorney can evaluate your situation.

Find the right lawyer for your situation

Free to you. Takes about two minutes.

Before you start, please understand:

CaseSolo Connect is a paid attorney-advertising / matching service — not a referral, not an endorsement, and not a law firm. We are not your lawyer and nothing here is legal advice. Nothing you enter here is confidential or protected by attorney-client privilege until you separately hire an attorney.

CaseSolo Connect is attorney advertising / a paid matching service — not a lawyer referral service, not a law firm, and not legal advice. Using this form does not create an attorney-client relationship.