Winning a judgment can feel like the finish line until the money never arrives. A cash offer gives you a different path: sell the judgment if the number makes sense, stop carrying the file yourself, and let the buyer make its own decisions after closing.
A judgment is not cash
A money judgment gives you rights on paper. It does not put money in your account by itself. The gap between paper and payment is where most judgment holders get stuck, because every serious next step requires time, attention, documents, and money.
Why buyers price risk
A judgment buyer is not paying the face amount just because the court entered it. The buyer looks at the age of the judgment, the debtor, the available information, the amount claimed, and the likely cost of continued work. The offer has to make business sense for the buyer and enough practical sense for you.
Why selling can be smart
Selling can make sense when cash now beats another year of frustration. You may give up possible future upside, but you may also stop funding professional time, research, follow-up, and uncertainty. The right question is whether the offer is better than continuing to carry the judgment yourself.
Start with the offer
Requesting a cash offer from EnforcePay does not require an upfront fee and does not obligate you to accept. If your judgment qualifies and an offer is made, you can review the number, ask practical questions, and decide whether selling is worth 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.