Frequently Asked Questions
The straight answers you need about demand letters. No legal jargon. No BS. Just what works.
Last Updated: December 28, 2025
About FreeDemandLetter
What is FreeDemandLetter?
Here is the deal. Someone owes you money. They are ignoring you. You need to get their attention.
FreeDemandLetter is a free tool that creates professional demand letters in about 3 minutes. We use AI to generate customized letters with legal citations specific to your location. You download it, send it certified mail, and watch how fast people respond when they realize you are serious.
The goal is simple. Level the playing field. Give regular people the same tools corporations use to collect what they are owed.
Is FreeDemandLetter a law firm?
No. Full stop. We are not lawyers. We are not pretending to be lawyers. Using our tool does not create an attorney-client relationship.
We built a tool. A good one. But it is still just a tool. For complex legal situations or disputes involving serious money, get an actual attorney. That is what they are there for.
Is it really free?
Yes. Actually free. No credit card. No "premium tier" nonsense. No bait and switch.
We run on donations from people we have helped and some minimal advertising. If you recover your money and want to throw us a few bucks, great. If not, that is fine too. The tool works either way.
What countries do you support?
14 countries. 270+ jurisdictions. 4,635 US counties.
- United States: All 50 states, DC, and territories
- Canada: All provinces and territories
- United Kingdom: England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland
- Australia: All states and territories
- New Zealand, Ireland, Singapore, Germany, France, Spain, Italy, Netherlands, India, Mexico
Each location includes the relevant legal citations, small claims limits, and consumer protection agencies. We did the homework so you do not have to.
Understanding Demand Letters
What is a demand letter?
A demand letter is a formal "pay up or else" document. It puts the other party on notice that you are serious, you know your rights, and you will escalate if they do not act.
Think of it as the shot across the bow before you file in court. Most disputes never get that far. Because here is the thing: companies and individuals hate dealing with formal legal action. A well-written demand letter often gets results because they would rather just pay than deal with the hassle.
It is used for security deposits, unpaid wages, refunds, contractor disputes, insurance claims. Basically any situation where someone owes you money and is pretending they do not.
Do demand letters actually work?
Yes. Often very well.
Here is why. A demand letter signals three things:
- You know what you are owed and why
- You are organized and documented
- You are willing to escalate
That third one matters most. Companies run the numbers. Fighting you in court costs money. Legal fees. Staff time. Bad reviews. Most of the time, it is cheaper to just pay what they owe.
We are not saying it works 100% of the time. Nothing does. But for disputes with merit, a professional demand letter changes the calculation.
Do I need a lawyer?
Usually no.
For straightforward disputes under a few thousand dollars, lawyers are overkill. The legal fees would eat your recovery. That is exactly why small claims court exists. Regular people, no lawyers required.
Consider a lawyer when:
- The amount is substantial (over 10k)
- The legal issues are genuinely complex
- The other side already has counsel
- You are unsure of your rights
For everything else, a well-crafted demand letter and willingness to follow through is usually enough.
What makes a good demand letter?
Short version: Facts, law, deadline, consequences.
Long version:
- Your information so they know who is coming for their money
- Their information so they know this is really about them
- What happened laid out clearly with dates and amounts
- Why you are entitled with relevant law cited
- Exactly what you want in dollars, not vague language
- A deadline because open-ended requests get ignored
- What happens next if they do not comply
Our tool handles all of this. You just answer the questions.
Using the Tool
How does it work?
Four steps. Maybe three minutes.
- Tell us what happened. Who owes you, how much, why.
- We generate your letter. AI creates it with your facts and location-specific legal citations.
- Review and edit. Make any changes you want.
- Download and send. Certified mail for the win.
That is it. No account needed. No hoops to jump through.
What types of disputes?
We cover 18 categories. The greatest hits of "someone screwed me over":
- Security deposits that landlords "forgot" to return
- Unpaid wages your employer owes you
- Consumer refunds for products and services that failed
- Contractor work that was never finished or done wrong
- Insurance claims that got wrongly denied
- Medical bills with errors or overcharges
- Auto accidents where someone owes damages
- Plus: HOA disputes, property damage, debt collection, personal injury, small business, education, telecom, utilities, neighbor disputes, fraud
How should I send the letter?
USPS Certified Mail with Return Receipt. This is not optional.
Why? Because you need proof. Proof they got it. Proof of when they got it. That green card that comes back is your evidence that they cannot claim they never received anything.
Costs about 8 to 10 bucks. Worth every penny if this ends up in court.
Send a backup copy by email too. Belt and suspenders.
What deadline should I give?
10 to 30 days depending on the situation.
- 10 to 14 days: When you have already been going back and forth, or for urgent matters
- 14 to 21 days: Standard for most situations
- 21 to 30 days: Larger amounts, or dealing with slow-moving bureaucracies
Pro tip: Use a specific date, not "within 14 days." January 15, 2025 is clear. "14 days" invites arguments about when the clock started.
After Sending
What happens next?
One of five things happens:
- They pay in full. Best case. Celebrate.
- They offer less. Now you negotiate.
- They dispute it. They disagree with your version. You may need to prove your case.
- They ask for time. Payment plan situation. Get it in writing.
- Radio silence. They ignore you. That is their choice. Now you escalate.
The key is to follow through on whatever you said you would do. Empty threats teach them to ignore future demands.
What if they ignore me?
Then you do what you said you would do. Options:
- Small claims court. For amounts under your state limit (usually 5k to 25k). No lawyer needed. Your demand letter becomes evidence of your good faith effort.
- Regulatory complaints. State Attorney General, consumer protection agencies, licensing boards. Companies hate these.
- BBB complaint. Creates a public record.
- Final notice. Sometimes a second letter with "this is your last chance" gets movement.
The point is: do something. Silence after a demand letter means you were bluffing. And now they know it.
What is small claims court?
Small claims court is the people's court. Designed for regular folks to sue without lawyers.
Here is the deal:
- Simple rules. No legal training required.
- Low filing fees. Usually 30 to 150 bucks.
- Fast resolution. Usually 2 to 3 months.
- Lawyers often not allowed. Even playing field.
Limits vary by state from 2,500 to 25,000 dollars. Our letters tell you what your state allows.
This is the natural next step when a demand letter fails. And judges love seeing you tried to resolve it first.
Legal Questions
Can I get in trouble for sending a demand letter?
No. Not if you are being honest.
Demand letters are a normal, legal, expected part of civil dispute resolution. People send them every day. Companies have entire departments that do nothing but.
What you should avoid:
- Lying. Do not make up facts.
- Threatening things you cannot do. "I'll have you arrested" for a civil debt is not how it works.
- Pretending to be a lawyer. Just do not.
- Harassment. One or two letters is fine. Fifty is not.
Stick to the facts. State your demand. Explain your options. That is all you need.
How long do I have to act?
There is no deadline for demand letters specifically. But there are statutes of limitations on claims.
Rough guidelines:
- Written contracts: 4 to 6 years
- Oral agreements: 2 to 4 years
- Personal injury: 2 to 3 years
- Property damage: 2 to 6 years
But here is the real advice: act sooner rather than later. Evidence gets lost. Memories fade. The longer you wait, the weaker your position.
Can I ask for extra damages?
Sometimes yes. And you should when the law allows it.
Examples:
- Security deposits: Many states allow 2x or 3x if the landlord acted in bad faith
- Consumer protection: Various statutes include penalty damages
- Wage theft: Often includes waiting time penalties plus attorney fees
Our tool knows these rules for your location and includes them when applicable. Free money on top of what you are owed.
Is it worth it for small amounts?
This is the question everyone asks. The answer is usually yes.
Think about it. Creating a demand letter takes 3 minutes. Sending certified mail costs 10 bucks. Total investment: 15 minutes and a Hamilton.
Even for a 75 dollar dispute, that math works. And companies know that ignoring formal demands leads to reviews, complaints, and court filings. The annoyance factor alone often gets results.
Plus there is principle. Letting people steal small amounts teaches them to keep doing it. Sometimes you fight on principle.
Privacy and Security
Is my information secure?
Yes.
- Everything encrypted via HTTPS
- We do not store your data longer than needed
- We do not sell your information. Ever. To anyone.
- Documents you upload are processed in memory and immediately deleted
We built this tool to help people, not to harvest data. Check the Privacy Policy for the full details.
Do you store my demand letter?
Minimal retention. Here is the breakdown:
- Your dispute details are kept 30 days so you can come back and edit if needed
- After 30 days, deleted
- Documents you upload are never stored. Memory only, then gone.
- Basic analytics to improve the service. Nothing personally identifiable sold.
Want your data deleted now? Email [email protected]. Done.
How can I support FreeDemandLetter?
If we helped you get your money back, you can help us keep the lights on:
- Donate. Any amount helps. Check the Support page.
- Share. Know someone getting screwed over? Send them here.
- Tell your story. Email [email protected]. Success stories keep us going.
Or do nothing. That is fine too. The tool stays free either way.
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