For defendants in small claims court

You Got Sued.
They're Preparing.
Now, So Will You.

Most small claims defendants lose before they say a word.

Not because they're wrong — because they weren't ready.

We fix that.

Built by an attorney with 20 years of litigation experience — who has sat on both sides of small claims court and watched defendants lose winnable cases every single day.
The three truths of every small claims case
Their version — what the plaintiff says happened.
Your version — what you say happened.
The truth — what you can prove to a judge. That's the only one that matters.
I Just Got Served — Show Me What To Do$17 flat fee · Instant access · No subscription

Who Sued You?

No matter who sued you — the preparation is the same. And it starts here.

What Happens If You Just Wing It

Most defendants walk in thinking their side of the story is enough. Here's what actually happens.

01
The Default Judgment
Don't show up or show up unprepared and the judge may rule against you before you say a word. A judgment follows you — your wages, your bank account, your credit.
02
The Organized Plaintiff
They filed the paperwork. They gathered the evidence. They know what the judge needs to hear. You showed up with your memory.
03
The Story That Doesn't Land
Your version of events is true. But truth without structure, documents, and clarity sounds like an excuse in a courtroom.
This is exactly what I've watched happen from both sides of the courtroom for years. The defendant wasn't wrong. They just weren't ready.
— Attorney, SuedSmallClaims.com

Everything You Need.
One Flat Fee.

No lawyer. No monthly subscription. No upsells. $17 and you're ready for court.

Document 01 — The First 48 Hours Guide
What to do the moment you get served. What the judge actually wants from you. Why most defendants lose before they open their mouth — and how to make sure that doesn't happen to you. Built from 20 years of watching both sides of these cases from inside the courtroom.
Document 02 — The Evidence Organizer
A fillable worksheet that walks you through your timeline, your documents, and your version of events — in your own words, organized the way a judge needs to hear them. The cut off text trap. The selective photo trap. The nothing in writing trap. All covered before you walk in.
Document 03 — The Courtroom Insider
What judges watch. What wins. What loses instantly. How to handle the plaintiff saying something false. How to manage nerves. The Court Challenge — the one thing almost no defendant does that eliminates 90% of courtroom stress before the day that counts. This is the section nobody else has.
Document 04 — The Hearing Day One-Pager
One page. Print it. Bring it. Keep it on the table in front of you. When your hands are shaking and your mind goes blank this is what you look at. Everything you need — in the order you need it — for the moment that counts.

Questions People Ask
Before They Buy

You're doing your due diligence. Good. Here are honest answers.

No. SuedSmallClaims.com is a document preparation and organization service. We help you gather, organize, and present your own facts clearly. For legal advice specific to your situation, consult a licensed attorney or your local court's self-help center.
Access is instant the moment you purchase. People have used this with less than a week before their hearing. The sooner you start the better — but it's never too late to get organized.
Yes. The preparation guide is built around what every courtroom in America has in common — and that's where most defendants fail anyway. For the procedural specifics in your state — deadlines, forms, filing fees — we give you a court clerk script with exactly what to ask. One call to your local courthouse and you have everything you need.
That's between you and the plaintiff. What this guide does is make sure you show up organized, your side of the story is heard clearly, and you understand exactly what's happening in that courtroom. Judges appreciate prepared defendants regardless of the circumstances.
You can. Most people do. Then they walk into court with pieces of information from twelve different websites, no clear picture of what to bring, no organized story, and no idea what the judge actually needs to hear. This puts everything in one place, specific to your situation, in the order you need it.