About
Traquor helps people handle everyday legal disputes with clear, professional letters — without the cost and friction of hiring a lawyer for routine matters.
Most disputes that end up in small-claims court (or never get filed because the person doesn't know how) start the same way: a strongly worded letter that cites the right statute, sets a clear deadline, and lays a paper trail for what comes next. Lawyers know how to write these letters. Most other people don't — not because the letters are complicated, but because the cost and time of hiring an attorney for a one-page demand outweighs the dispute.
We built Traquor to close that gap. You pick a situation, answer a few plain-language prompts, and get a state-aware letter you can mail, email, or hand over the same day.
What we cover
27 letter types across six categories, available for every U.S. state, the District of Columbia, and the five U.S. territories:
- Tenant & Renter — security-deposit demands, mold remediation, habitability notices, lease termination, and landlord harassment
- Landlord & Property Owner — rent demands, lease-violation notices, notices to quit, notices of entry, lease non-renewal
- Consumer Rights — defective products, debt-validation under the FDCPA, billing-error disputes under the FCBA, warranty claims, refund demands
- Employment — final paycheck and unpaid-wages demands, ADA accommodation requests, hostile-workplace complaints
- Small Claims — demands before suit, settlement offers, payment-plan proposals
- HOA & Neighbor — HOA-violation disputes, noise complaints, boundary disputes, parking-violation responses
Where state law matters
Our letters use jurisdiction-specific citations where they make a difference. A California security-deposit demand cites Civil Code § 1950.5 and the 21-day deadline; a Texas one cites Property Code § 92.103 and the 30-day deadline. A New York rent demand uses the 14-day notice required under RPAPL § 711; a California one uses the 3-day notice under CCP § 1161(2). Statute citations and deadlines vary by state and we review them against current law (last full review: June 2026).
What we are not
Traquor is not a law firm and our letters are not a substitute for legal advice. We provide self-help document templates and information. For high-stakes or complex matters — an eviction defense, a wrongful-termination suit, a serious habitability claim — consult a licensed attorney in your state.