Landlord problem? Protect yourself.
Upload the lease, the email, or the notice. Occupry tells you what it means, what it could cost you, what to save, and what to send next.
Works with texts, emails, notices, PDFs, screenshots, and whatever messy thread you have right now.
Decode
What the landlord message or lease clause actually means.
Catch
Money traps, deadlines, and clauses worth pushing on.
Send
A cleaner reply or negotiation ask when you need one.

Example first read
Renewal + fee increase
Status
Caution
The renewal offer raises the monthly cost and shortens the time you have to decide. Save the offer, compare another place, and ask which fees actually change before you agree.
Money jump
+$210/mo with fees
Save first
Renewal message + current lease
Ask back
Which charges are actually new?
Three ways renters use this first.
Most people show up with either a sketchy landlord message, a lease they do not fully trust, or a bad current place they need to outgrow.
If the current lease is going badly, the compare + negotiate flow helps line up the next place before you are under deadline.
Check a landlord message
Upload the email, text, or notice. See what it means, whether it is a real risk, and what to do before you answer.
Compare total lease cost
Stack up rent, deposits, fees, concessions, utilities, and renewal traps so the real monthly cost is obvious.
Negotiate before you sign
Know which terms to push on before you commit: rent, credits, repairs, notice windows, move-out fees, and auto-renew language.
Texts, fees, repair drama, renewal pressure.
You should not need to know landlord-tenant law or build the perfect folder before getting help.
Bring texts, emails, PDFs, lease addenda, screenshots, photos, and notices. The point is to figure out the next move before the story gets more expensive.
Random fee or charge
Figure out whether the lease supports it and what to save before you push back.
Repair issue that keeps dragging
See what the lease says, what dates matter, and how to document the story cleanly.
Renewal offer that feels off
Spot the short fuse, the hidden cost jump, and the terms to question before you agree.
Deposit or move-out dispute
Build the evidence list early so the handoff does not turn into your word against theirs.
Entry, privacy, or communication issue
Turn a bad feeling into a clearer record of what happened and what reply is safest.
Need a better next lease
Compare options, negotiate the weak spots, and avoid repeating the same problem next time.
You should leave with receipts, not anxiety.
The product earns trust by giving you a fast read now and staying useful when the next message or deadline shows up.
01
Risk call
Safe, caution, or high risk in plain English, with the top reasons first.
02
Money read
What the clause, fee, or landlord message could actually cost you.
03
Proof list
Which screenshots, photos, receipts, and dates to save right now.
04
Reply draft
A message you can send without boxing yourself in later.
1
After the first upload
Get the first read on the problem, the money, and the next move that matters.
2
When the landlord writes again
See whether it needs a reply, what it means, and a draft if it does.
3
Before deadlines hit
Get warned before notice windows, renewal dates, or move-out timing turn expensive.
4
While you shop the next place
Keep candidate leases side by side and negotiate a cleaner next deal.
Compare the real cost. Negotiate the parts that matter.
Use this before you sign, while you are pushing for a better deal, or when your current place is bad and you need the next lease to be cleaner.
01
See the full monthly hit after rent, fees, deposits, concessions, specials, and utility add-ons.
02
Surface the clauses worth negotiating before you sign: rent, credits, repairs, notice windows, and auto-renew language.
03
Keep multiple leases side by side and mark which option is actually the cleanest deal.
04
If the current place is going badly, use the same workflow to shop your exit before the pressure gets worse.

| Compare | Maple Court | Juniper Flats | Elm Terrace |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real monthly cost | $1,430 | $1,515 | $1,462 |
| Fee trap risk | Low | High | Medium |
| Repairs pushed to renter | Low | High | Medium |
| Move-out flexibility | Strong | Weak | Average |
Lowest real cost
Maple Court
Highest trap risk
Juniper Flats
Most negotiable
Elm Terrace
Want the renter release when it ships?
The current app is live now. The simpler renter flow is next. Use what exists today, or get the update when the consumer version lands.
Get updates
Consumer protection workflows are rolling out next.