For self-managing landlords
Upload any residential lease and Lease Lens flags the risky clauses, missing protections, and renewal traps — with plain-English explanations and suggested fixes. No legal background required.
Auto-renewal trap — §12.3
Lease renews automatically for 12 months unless written notice is given 60 days prior. There's no cap on how many times this can trigger.
→ Add a clause limiting automatic renewals to one term without landlord reconfirmation.
Three steps. No account setup. No legal jargon in the output.
Drop in a PDF or Word doc. Any length, any state. Lease Lens reads every clause — not just the usual suspects.
Auto-renewal traps, unlimited landlord entry, waived security deposit rights, missing habitability clauses — ranked by severity.
Every flag includes what the clause says, why it's a problem, and a specific fix you can actually use — not "consult an attorney."
Built for landlords who review their own paperwork.
You review leases on your own schedule. Lease Lens is the second set of eyes that catches what you'd miss at 11pm the night before signing.
Hiring a real estate attorney for a routine lease review costs $200–$400 and takes days. This takes 30 seconds and tells you whether you actually need to make that call.
Lease law varies significantly by state. If you're unfamiliar with local tenant protections, Lease Lens flags clauses that may conflict with what the jurisdiction actually requires.
Buying a property with existing tenants means inheriting their paperwork. Know exactly what obligations you're taking on before the deed changes hands.
Early access
We're opening Lease Lens to a small group first. Join the waitlist and we'll reach out before we launch publicly.
No spam. Just a heads-up when we're ready.