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.
Board meeting prep is a quarterly fire drill — the corporate secretary scrambles to assemble board books from 6 different sources, track director consents across time zones, maintain minutes archives, and ensure governance resolutions are properly filed, all while the GC changes the agenda 48 hours before the meeting.
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'
Corporate legal department manages 500+ matters across 30 outside firms but has no single source of truth — matter details live in email chains, budget approvals happen via PDF attachments, and when the GC asks 'how many active IP matters do we have in EMEA and what's the projected spend?' the answer takes a paralegal two days to compile from scattered spreadsheets
Every new legal tech tool means another vendor login, another security review, another budget line — the in-house team just wants something that works within the Microsoft stack they already have without adding procurement complexity
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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