Consumer legal app for disputing parking and traffic tickets. Users upload ticket photos, WinIt’s attorney network handles the dispute process. Risk-free model: 50% of fine amount, charged only on dismissal. Primarily NYC-focused but expanding. ~94 employees. ~$8.6M estimated annual revenue. 100K+ successful cases claimed. 4.87/5 from 1,382 reviews on Reviews.io. App Store rating strong. BBB complaints exist — some users report unsolicited contact and billing disputes. Competitors: Off The Record (nationwide, lawyer referral), GetDismissed (California), NYC Pay or Dispute (free city app). Not a tool for legal professionals — it’s a consumer service that connects ticket recipients with attorneys. The attorney side is a managed marketplace. Core audience: drivers in NYC and expanding metro areas who receive parking/traffic tickets.
Company Info
- Founded: 2020
- Team size: 51-200 employees
- HQ: United States
- Sector: Litigation
What We Haven’t Verified
This page was assembled from publicly available information. Feature claims and workflow mappings are based on what the vendor and third-party listings publish — not hands-on testing or practitioner feedback.
Workflows
Based on practitioner evidence, Winit is used in these workflows:
What practitioners struggle with
Real frustrations from legal professionals — the problems Winit addresses (or should address). Sourced from practitioner reviews, Reddit threads, and case studies.
Couple going through a relatively straightforward uncontested divorce is quoted $10,000-15,000+ per person by traditional family law attorneys — for what amounts to filling out state-specific forms, negotiating a few asset splits, and filing paperwork. They don't need a full-service attorney for every step, but they also can't afford to mess up court filings that affect custody, property division, and their financial future. Need a middle ground between 'hire a $350/hr attorney for everything' and 'download blank forms from the court website and hope for the best'
Driver gets a $115 parking ticket in NYC and knows it's wrong — the sign was obscured, the meter was broken — but fighting it means taking a half-day off work to appear at a hearing, so they just pay the fine and the city collects revenue on a bogus ticket
Traffic attorney handles 200 low-value ticket cases a month — each one requires the same intake process, the same court appearance scheduling, the same status updates to clients — but there's no system connecting the volume to the attorney efficiently, so the economics only work if you batch process and hope clients don't call asking for updates
Community Data
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