You don't need a lawyer to serve papers. We do it for $99.
If you're filing a divorce, eviction, small claim, or restraining order on your own, the court still requires you to formally notify the other party. Mess that up and your case gets dismissed. We handle it for you. $99 flat. Money-back if we don't make every attempt before your court date.
✓ No legal jargon · ✓ No waiting on hold · ✓ Money-back if we don't make every attempt
You're not alone, and this isn't complicated.
More than 60% of people in family court don't have a lawyer. Most of them get tripped up not by the case itself but by how to properly notify the other side. That's what “service of process” means — legally telling the other party that a case has been filed. The court won't move your case forward until it's done. We do it right, every time, so this part isn't the thing that derails you.
Four steps. We'll guide you through each one.
- 1Take a photo of your paperwork
Snap your filed complaint or upload the PDF. Our chat asks for what we need in plain English — the other person's name, the address, your court date. Five minutes total.
- 2We confirm the details with you
Our chat reads your filing and pulls out who needs to be served, the address you provided, and the service type. You confirm — or correct what's wrong — before we dispatch.
- 3A real human serves the papers
A licensed process server in your area knocks on the door, hands over the papers, takes a photo and GPS proof. Up to 3 attempts at no extra charge.
- 4You get your proof of service
A signed, court-ready affidavit lands in your inbox — same one you'd get from a $300 server. You print it, file it with your court, and your case moves forward.
One price. No surprises.
Most pro-se servers charge $150–$350 with hidden per-attempt fees. We don't.
100% refund if we didn't complete every attempt in your service window. That's the trigger — no partials. We don't refund if we made every attempt, even when the failure is on facts you provided (wrong address, defendant moved without forwarding). Full terms →
We serve papers for every common pro se case.
If your case isn't listed, ask in chat — we cover almost anything in civil court.
Petition for dissolution + summons to your spouse.
Notice to quit + unlawful detainer summons.
Plaintiff claim + summons in any state.
Temporary restraining order (TRO) + notice of hearing — priority dispatch.
Subpoena duces tecum to a non-party witness.
Modification petitions, contempt motions.
The actual concerns we hear — answered straight.
We've done this thousands of times. None of these are dumb questions.
›What if I can't find the person I'm serving?
We offer skip-trace as a $59 add-on. We search public records + commercial databases for current addresses. If we still can't find them, you can ask the court for sub-service or service by publication — we'll explain what that means.
›What if they avoid me / hide from the server?
After 3 documented attempts, most states allow you to leave papers with another adult at the address ('sub-service') or post them on the door. We document each attempt with GPS + photos so the court accepts the diligence.
›What if I'm wrong about something on my paperwork?
We're not a law firm — we don't review your legal strategy. But your court's self-help center is free and a real lawyer is always an option. We focus on the mechanical part: getting the papers served correctly.
›Will the other person know my home address?
No. We use our address as the server, not yours. Your name appears on the papers as the filer (that's public court record) but your home address doesn't come from us.
›What if I can't afford $99?
Many courts have fee waivers for low-income litigants — we'll point you to your county's fee-waiver form. If approved, the court may cover the service cost separately.
›Is this legal? Can I really serve papers without a lawyer?
Yes. You cannot serve them yourself (you have to be a non-party), but you can absolutely hire a process server. That's what we are. Every state allows it.