THEY BROKE THE CONTRACT. THE LAW ENTITLES YOU TO DAMAGES.

Breach of Contract Attorneys On Call — No Retainer Required.

When the other party doesn't deliver, a legal plan attorney enforces what you're owed — fast.

Every Day You Wait Is Another Day They Keep Your Money.

A legal plan gives you licensed contract attorney access for a flat monthly rate — no retainer, no hourly billing.

Tell us what happened. An attorney will call you back.

They broke the agreement. Make them pay for it.

Save thousands in legal fees.

Note: Legal plans are not free services. They are affordable prepaid legal solutions provided by licensed attorneys.

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The Party That Breached Your Contract Is Counting on You Not Having a Lawyer.

Contract attorneys charge $200–$500/hr — and most people who've been wronged never pursue their claim because the cost of legal help feels disproportionate to the amount at stake.

A legal plan gives you licensed breach of contract attorneys on call for a flat monthly fee — so the cost of enforcing your rights never becomes a reason to let the other party walk away.

  • Immediate attorney review of the breach and your remedies
  • Formal demand letters that compel a response
  • Negotiated settlements, mediation, and arbitration
  • Full litigation support when they still refuse to comply
Cost Comparison
Contract Attorney (hourly) $200–$500/hr
Doing Nothing They keep your money
Waiting Too Long Statute of limitations closes
Legal Plan Membership ~$1/day

Real Member. Real Result.

What a Demand Letter From an Attorney Actually Does

★★★★★

"A contractor took $22,000 from me, completed about 30% of the work, and stopped responding. I sent emails and calls for three months with no result. My plan attorney reviewed the contract, confirmed material breach, and sent a formal demand letter giving them 14 days to cure or face litigation. They responded within 48 hours and we settled for a full refund of the unused portion — $15,400. The attorney's letter in 48 hours accomplished what three months of my own attempts couldn't."

Thomas W.
Denver, CO

⏱️ Breach of Contract Claim Timeline

Act Before Your Statute of Limitations Expires

Written contracts: typically 4–6 years · Oral contracts: 2–3 years · UCC goods contracts: 4 years — clock starts at breach

Breach Just Occurred
Best Position — Maximum Leverage

Evidence is fresh, communications are recent, and the breaching party knows the dispute is current. An attorney sends a formal demand immediately — most breach claims resolve at this stage without litigation when backed by legal authority.

Within 6 Months
Still Strong — Act Soon

Evidence intact and the breach is recent enough to negotiate effectively. Many contracts contain notice and cure clauses requiring formal notice within a set period — an attorney confirms whether you've met those requirements.

1–3 Years Out
Approaching Deadline

Oral contract limitations of 2–3 years may be closing. Written contract windows vary by state — some as short as 3 years. An attorney confirms your specific deadline and files before it closes permanently.

At or Past Limit
Check Now — Exceptions May Apply

The statute may have tolled where the breach was concealed, the contract contained a continuing obligation, or fraud was involved. Some states allow discovery-rule tolling. An attorney checks all available options immediately.

Don't let the statute of limitations hand them a free pass. Get an attorney on it today.

Check Your Deadline Now

How a Legal Plan Helps With Breach of Contract

Breach Assessment

Your attorney reviews the contract and the facts to confirm whether a legally actionable breach has occurred, what type of breach it is, what remedies are available, and the strength of your position before any action is taken.

Formal Demand Letters

A demand letter from an attorney carries legal weight that personal emails and calls never do. It signals that you're serious, identifies the specific breach, states the remedy demanded, and sets a response deadline — resolving most disputes without court.

Negotiation & Settlement

Your attorney negotiates directly with the breaching party or their counsel — working toward a binding settlement that recovers your damages without the time and cost of litigation wherever possible.

Litigation & Court Proceedings

When the other party refuses to settle, your attorney files suit and pursues the case through small claims court, arbitration, or full civil litigation — pursuing compensatory damages, consequential damages, and attorney fees where available.

Breach of Contract Legal Help for Every Situation

A breach of contract occurs when one party fails to fulfil their obligations without a legally valid excuse. Breaches range from minor failures to complete non-performance — and the remedies available depend on the type and severity of the breach.

A legal plan connects you with experienced contract attorneys who assess the breach, calculate your damages, and pursue every dollar you're owed — without the cost of traditional hourly billing.

Breach of Contract Claims Include:
  • Non-payment for services rendered or goods delivered
  • Contractor failure to complete agreed work
  • Vendor or supplier non-performance or late delivery
  • Employer breach of employment contract terms
  • Business partner failure to meet agreement obligations
  • Landlord breach of lease terms
  • Buyer or seller breach of purchase agreements
  • NDA and non-compete violations

Types of Breach — and What You Can Recover

What type of breach occurred determines what remedies your attorney pursues

Material Breach

The other party's failure is so significant it defeats the purpose of the contract. You are released from your own obligations and entitled to full compensatory damages — what you paid minus the value of what you received, plus consequential losses.

Minor Breach

Partial performance — the other party mostly delivered but fell short in ways that caused you harm. You remain bound by the contract but can recover damages for the specific shortfall. An attorney calculates the exact amount owed.

Anticipatory Breach

The other party declares in advance they won't perform — or their actions make clear they can't. An attorney acts immediately to mitigate your losses and pursue damages before the performance date even arrives.

Compensatory Damages

Direct losses from the breach — money paid for work not done, revenue lost due to non-delivery, or costs incurred finding a replacement. Your attorney documents every dollar and pursues the full amount.

Consequential Damages

Losses beyond direct damages that were foreseeable at the time of the contract — lost profits, missed business opportunities, or downstream costs caused by the breach. An attorney argues for full consequential recovery.

Specific Performance

In some cases — unique goods, real estate, or one-of-a-kind services — money damages aren't adequate. An attorney can seek a court order compelling the breaching party to actually perform what they agreed to do.

Get Legal Help in 3 Simple Steps

No retainer. No hourly fees. Just real attorney access.

1
Submit Your Details

Tell us what was agreed, what the other party failed to do, and what you've lost — so we can connect you with the right legal support.

2
A Legal Rep Calls You Back

A legal plan representative reaches out, explains your options, and connects you with experienced contract attorneys at an affordable monthly rate.

3
Speak with a Provider Attorney

Get connected with a licensed contract attorney — breach assessment, demand letters, settlement negotiation, and full litigation support to recover what you're owed.

Who Needs a Breach of Contract Legal Plan

Contractor & Service Disputes

Contractors who abandoned projects, delivered substandard work, or refused to return deposits after non-performance.

Unpaid Invoices

Businesses and freelancers owed payment for completed work — where the client refuses to pay or disputes the amount without justification.

Supplier Non-Performance

Vendors who failed to deliver goods or services as agreed — causing downstream losses, missed deadlines, or additional costs.

Employment Contract Breach

Employers who failed to pay agreed compensation, terminated without cause in violation of contract terms, or breached restrictive covenant agreements.

Business Partner Disputes

Partners or co-founders who failed to meet obligations under a partnership or operating agreement — including capital contributions, duties, and non-compete commitments.

Property & Lease Disputes

Landlords who breached lease obligations or buyers and sellers who failed to complete agreed real estate or purchase transactions.

Why a Demand Letter From an Attorney Is Different

It Creates Legal Urgency

A demand letter from a licensed attorney signals that legal action is imminent — not just threatened. Most breach disputes resolve at this stage because the other party recognises the cost and risk of litigation.

It Documents Everything

An attorney's demand letter creates a formal record of the breach, your losses, and the remedy demanded — evidence that strengthens your position in any subsequent negotiation or court proceeding.

Represented Claimants Recover More

People with legal representation consistently recover more in contract disputes — both because attorneys know what damages are available and because the other party negotiates differently when they know you have counsel.

What Our Members Say

★★★★★

"A contractor took $22,000, completed 30% of the work, and went silent. Three months of emails got nothing. My plan attorney sent a formal demand letter and they responded in 48 hours. We settled for $15,400 — the full refund of the unused portion. That letter did in 48 hours what I couldn't do in months."

Thomas W.
Denver, CO
★★★★★

"A client refused to pay the final $18,000 on a project, claiming the work was incomplete — despite written sign-offs at every milestone. My plan attorney confirmed the sign-offs constituted acceptance, sent a demand, and the client paid in full within 10 days. Outcome without an attorney: I would have written it off."

Priya S.
San Jose, CA
★★★★★

"My business partner stopped meeting his capital contribution obligations under our operating agreement and began competing directly with our business. My plan attorney confirmed both breaches, sent formal notices, and we negotiated a buyout that fairly valued my share. The plan was essential from day one of that dispute."

Kevin L.
Atlanta, GA
★★★★★

"A supplier failed to deliver critical inventory for three months, costing my business significant lost revenue. My plan attorney calculated consequential damages beyond just the invoice amount, sent a formal breach notice, and we recovered both the direct costs and a portion of the downstream losses I hadn't thought to claim."

Michelle T.
Houston, TX

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