A judgment holder should not have to pay another upfront fee just to find out whether a buyer is interested. The first step should be simple: request the offer and decide after you see whether the numbers work.
No upfront fee to ask
Requesting a cash offer from EnforcePay does not require an upfront fee. You can submit the basic judgment information, speak with a specialist, and learn whether EnforcePay may be interested as a buyer.
No obligation to accept
An offer is an option, not a command. If EnforcePay makes a cash offer, you can accept or decline. The decision should come down to whether selling beats holding the judgment yourself.
Why the review still matters
No upfront cost does not mean every judgment qualifies. EnforcePay still evaluates the judgment as a business purchase. The amount, age, debtor information, documents, and economics all matter.
What to send first
Start with the judgment amount, court, case number if available, debtor name, and your best contact information. If something is missing, an acquisition specialist can ask for it.
EnforcePay is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. If you need legal advice about your judgment or a sale agreement, consult your own attorney.