01   A service of Trarian

Trapped in a contract you never meant to renew?

Upload it. Tell us what's going on. Our AI reads the fine print and shows you your real options for getting out — including whether that buyout fee is the kind courts have thrown out. The analysis is $50; when you're ready, a licensed attorney can send the letter for a flat $200.

Flat fee. No percentage of your savings. B2B only.

  Who this is for

Built for businesses stuck in the contracts designed to be hard to leave

You signed a service agreement — maybe a driver handed you a tablet and you initialed it. Now you want out, and you're staring at a renewal you didn't catch or a buyout quote that makes no sense.

Uniform & linen services
Five-year terms, narrow cancellation windows, buyouts billed as "half of every remaining week."
Waste & recycling hauling
Evergreen contracts, certified-mail-only windows, and buyouts around six times your monthly bill.
Copier & office-equipment leases
A bank lease stacked on a service contract, annual escalators, and return traps.
Merchant services & POS leases
48-month non-cancelable terms and four-figure buyouts on a terminal worth a couple hundred dollars.
Business telecom & internet
Early-termination charges set at most of the fees you'd have paid for the whole term.
SaaS, alarm & everything else
Auto-renewals buried in a window you'll probably miss.

If a vendor is telling you that you can't leave — or that leaving will cost a fortune — start here before you pay them a dime.

  Why you're stuck

These contracts aren't confusing by accident

01
The auto-renewal you didn't see
Buried in the service terms, not the order form. Miss a narrow notice window — often 90 to 180 days before the term ends — and you're locked in for another multi-year term.
02
The cancellation maze
Certified mail only. A specific address. A specific date range. Anything off and the clock resets.
03
The buyout that's really a penalty
The number to leave is calculated on your entire remaining contract — gross revenue to the vendor, not what they actually lose. Courts have repeatedly refused to enforce buyout clauses that are a penalty instead of a real estimate of harm.

Consultants can audit and negotiate, but they have no legal teeth. Lawyers do — for $400 an hour, and usually only if the dispute is big enough to bother with. That gap is the product.

01   /   How it works

From trapped to released in five steps

01
Upload your contract — and tell us the situation
You want out. They won't let you. A surprise renewal hit, or a buyout quote landed. Give us the document and the story.
02
Our AI reads it and lays out your options
What your contract actually says about termination, notice windows, and auto-renewal — plus the buyout math, in plain English.
03
Get a clear recommendation
The strongest angle for your situation — a missed-notice fix, a vendor breach, or disputing a buyout that looks like an unenforceable penalty. If you don't have a real argument, we'll tell you that too.
04
Want it sent? An attorney reviews and sends the letter — $200
A licensed attorney reviews your contract and situation, then sends the termination or demand letter on law firm letterhead.
05
If it escalates, you're not on your own
Most situations end with the letter or a negotiated exit. If yours needs more, we help with the next step — negotiation, small claims, or a referral.

  The penalty doctrine

$8,400

A buyout billed on your full remaining term — the kind courts have struck down.

Why that buyout might not hold up

Most vendor buyouts are billed on your entire remaining contract — "six times your monthly bill," or "half of every week left." That's revenue to the vendor, not the money they actually lose when you leave.

Courts have struck down buyout and liquidated-damages clauses again and again when the number is a penalty designed to trap you, rather than a fair estimate of real harm. We can't promise how a court would treat your specific contract — every one is different, and some are enforceable. But we'll give you a straight answer on whether you've got a fight worth having.

02   /   What you get

Everything a trapped contract needs, nothing it doesn't

Analysis

Reads the fine print you didn't

Auto-renewal clauses, notice windows, escalators, and the buyout formula — pulled out and explained.

Recommendation

Tells you your actual options

Not "go hire a lawyer." A specific read on how you get out of this contract, and which angle is strongest.

Penalty check

Flags a buyout that may not hold up

When the fee to leave is billed on your full remaining term, that's the kind of penalty courts have struck down. We'll tell you honestly.

$200 tier

Attorney-backed letter

A licensed attorney reviews everything and sends the letter on law firm letterhead. Flat fee.

Coverage

Built for the contracts that trap you

Uniform, waste, copier, merchant-services, telecom, SaaS, alarm. The mechanics are nearly identical.

Paper trail

Keeps you on the record

Documented, dated, with a deadline — the paper trail you'd want if it goes further.

03   /   Pricing

No retainer. No percentage of your savings.

Contract analysis & your options
Upload your contract and tell us the situation. A plain-English read of your terms, your renewal and notice traps, and the buyout math — plus your strongest path out.
Information about your options — not legal advice.
$50
Attorney review & letter
A licensed attorney reviews your contract and your situation, then writes and sends the termination or demand letter on law firm letterhead.
Limited-scope representation. Availability varies by state.
$200

Most exits are resolved with the letter or a negotiated settlement. If yours isn't, we help you with next steps — negotiation, small claims, or a referral for a larger dispute. Additional fees apply at that stage.

Analyze your contract — $50

04   /   Questions

The things people ask first

Will this actually get me out of my contract?

It depends on what your contract says — and we'll tell you honestly. The $50 analysis shows you your real options and how strong they are. In a lot of cases, the attorney letter alone is enough to get a vendor to release you or settle. We don't guarantee outcomes, and we'll tell you if your case is weak.

Is the buyout fee even enforceable?

Sometimes it isn't. When a buyout is calculated as a penalty rather than a fair estimate of the vendor's actual loss, courts often won't enforce it. We'll flag whether yours looks vulnerable — but only an attorney reviewing your specific contract can give you legal advice on it, and that's what the $200 tier is for.

Is the $50 analysis legal advice?

No. It's information about how your contract works and what your options are. The moment you want legal advice or a letter sent, that's handled by a licensed attorney on the $200 tier.

Do you have real attorneys?

Yes. The $200 letter is reviewed and sent by a licensed attorney on law firm letterhead. Attorney services depend on licensed coverage in your state — we'll confirm before you pay.

What kinds of contracts do you handle?

The auto-renewing vendor contracts that are hardest to leave: uniform and linen, waste hauling, copier and equipment leases, merchant-services and POS leases, business telecom and internet, SaaS subscriptions, and alarm monitoring.

What if the vendor ignores the letter?

You're not stuck. We help you with the next step — a negotiated exit, a small-claims filing, or a referral for a bigger dispute — with your documentation already in order.

  For brokers, cost consultants & procurement teams

You can audit and negotiate. We add the legal teeth.

If you manage vendor contracts for clients, you know the wall: you can't apply legal pressure or send an attorney's letter. We're the execution layer. White-label our analysis and attorney-reviewed letters, and finally close the loop for the clients you couldn't fully help.

Talk to us about partnering

Find out if you can get out.

Upload your contract and get a straight read on your options for $50. When you're ready, an attorney can send the letter for $200.