For most people, facing a legal document leaves two options: sign blind or pay a lawyer hundreds of dollars. MAIN AI offers a third path—upload, wait 60 seconds, and get a breakdown of the traps plus a letter that fires back.
80+ Specialized Engines, One Per Problem
Behind MAIN AI is a set of narrowly focused engines—tenants' rights, employment law, medical billing disputes, NDAs, severance agreements, debt collection, insurance appeals—over 80 in total. Each engine handles only one document type, so it can cite the exact state statute that applies, not generic advice. The workflow is dead simple: upload a PDF or DOCX, wait about a minute, read the report. No credit card required for the free tier.
- Lease review: spots illegal eviction clauses and security deposit loopholes
- Employment agreement: flags overly broad non-competes and miscalculated overtime
- Medical bill: compares CPT codes to federal pricing to catch overcharges
- NDA check: highlights vague definitions or unreasonable duration
From Risk Flags to Actionable Documents
Most tools stop at highlighting problems. MAIN AI's real value is generating court-ready correspondence. For example, an unfair severance offer triggers a letter referencing the Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act, ready to sign and send to HR or the opposing counsel.
A typical scenario: a tenant receives an eviction notice without the 30-day cure period required by state law. After uploading, the AI cites the state's Uniform Residential Landlord and Tenant Act and produces a protest letter demanding withdrawal and cost reimbursement. The whole thing takes less time than a coffee break.
Currently supported document types include demand letters for debt collection, insurance appeals, medical billing disputes, and formal protest letters to landlords or employers. For users without legal training, this leap from detection to action dramatically lowers the barrier to asserting their rights.
Can It Replace a Lawyer? Realistically, No—But It Fills a Gap
On simple disputes with clear facts and straightforward law—an employer refusing to pay final wages, a landlord wrongfully holding a deposit—MAIN AI performs well. But it doesn't handle complex case law, courtroom strategy, or multi-state litigation. The AI cites statutes accurately but won't weigh a judge's tendencies or local court practices. Also, results depend heavily on document quality: blurry scans or handwritten notes often cause extraction errors. The developers recommend clean PDFs or DOCX files for best results.
All in all, MAIN AI is built for people who can't afford a $400-per-hour attorney. It's not perfect, but for reviewing contracts, resolving simple disputes, and generating legal correspondence, it delivers a practical self-help option. If you're sitting on a suspicious medical bill, a dubious NDA, or an eviction notice that feels off, spending 60 seconds to upload it is a smarter move than signing in the dark.











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