Now accepting early access

Your landlord's lawyer
wrote that lease.
Now you can
actually read it.

Paste any clause from your rental agreement and get a plain-English breakdown of what it means, what's risky, and what you can push back on — before you're locked in.

No spam. We'll reach out when early access opens.

Lease clause

"Tenant shall indemnify, defend, and hold harmless Landlord from any and all claims, actions, damages, liability, and expense in connection with loss of life, personal injury, or damage to property arising from any occurrence in, upon, or at the Premises, whether or not caused by Landlord's negligence..."

Plain English

What it means

You're agreeing to cover the landlord's legal costs if anyone sues over anything that happened in your unit — even if the landlord caused it.

Risky

This is broader than standard. You could be liable for building maintenance failures that have nothing to do with you.

What to negotiate

Ask to limit this to your own negligence only. Most landlords will accept narrower language if you ask.

How it works

01

Paste the clause

Copy any section from your lease — the ones you glazed over, the ones full of words you've never seen before, the ones your landlord rushed you through.

02

Get the translation

In seconds you'll see what the clause actually means in plain English, what's risky or unusual, and which terms are genuinely negotiable.

03

Sign knowing what you agreed to

Go to the table with a clear head. Or push back — knowing exactly what leverage you have and what language to ask for.

Who this is for

If you've ever skimmed a lease clause and hoped for the best, this is for you.

First-time renters

You've never signed a lease before and nobody teaches you how to read one. Every clause sounds intimidating. We translate it so you know exactly what you're agreeing to.

Moving to a new city

Tenant protections in Austin aren't the same as in Chicago. What's standard in one market is a red flag in another. We flag the unusual terms so you know what's worth pushing back on.

On the landlord's deadline

The lease is 40 pages and they want it back by Friday. You shouldn't have to rush through a 12-month legal commitment. We help you focus on what actually matters.

Don't sign something
you don't understand.

Join the waitlist. We'll reach out when early access opens.