Get paid
Someone Owes You Money?
An invoice is not a payment. A promise is not a payment. A signed contract is not a payment. The only thing that is a payment is money in your account. New York gives you real tools to convert what you are owed into what you actually have — but you have to use them.
The attorney demand letter
A letter from a law firm changes the conversation. It signals that the next step is a lawsuit and the cost calculus has shifted. A meaningful portion of debts get paid in full within a couple of weeks of a well-drafted demand, with no further action required. Flat fee, fast turnaround.
Filing suit
If the debtor will not pay, the next step is suit. For amounts up to $10,000 in New York City, Small Claims Court is fast and inexpensive. Above that, Civil Court or Supreme Court is the forum. Strong documentation — contract, invoices, communications — almost always produces a judgment.
Enforcement is its own job
A judgment is a piece of paper until you enforce it. New York allows information subpoenas, bank restraining notices, wage garnishment, and property liens. Many creditors win a judgment and stop there. The ones who get paid are the ones who keep going. We handle the full cycle: demand, judgment, collection.
Talk to a New York attorney about your matter.
Flat-fee matter review. Straight answers, no runaround.