Free Notice to Cure Letter Review

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Received or drafting a cure letter? Have AI review it. Fast, expert identification of defective notices, missing statutory language, and bad-faith demands.

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Key Takeaways

AI flags cure letters that fail state-statutory notice requirements

Detect missing specifics (dollar amount, default details, cure deadline)

Identify cure periods shorter than required by lease or statute

Free review for landlord-tenant, commercial, and lender cure notices

1-2 minutes*

Average Review Time

155+ compliance points analyzed*

Compliance Checks

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Document Security

* Estimates based on typical documents. Actual results vary by document type and complexity.

Justee's AI-powered cure letter review tool analyzes notice-to-cure and notice-to-quit letters from landlords, lenders, and commercial counterparties for statutory and contractual compliance. The tool flags cure periods shorter than state landlord-tenant or commercial-default requirements, missing required elements (specific default, dollar amount due, cure deadline, consequences of failure to cure), service defects (improper method, wrong recipient), and bad-faith demands designed to manufacture default rather than secure performance. Justee maps each letter against the operative agreement's notice provisions and the controlling state statute. Cure letters set the legal stage for eviction, foreclosure, contract termination, or default judgment. Common cure-letter defects include vague descriptions of the alleged default, deadlines computed without weekends or holidays, service to outdated addresses, and demands for sums exceeding the actual default. Professional cure letter review protects the recipient and validates the sender's position.

How It Works

1

Upload Your Document

Upload your contract in PDF, DOCX, or TXT format

2

AI Analysis

Our AI reviews your document for compliance issues

3

Review Findings

Get detailed findings with risk ratings and legal citations

4

Take Action

Use our suggestions to improve your document

What We Check

Statutory cure-period verification

Default specificity (amount, date, basis)

Service method and recipient compliance

Cure-deadline computation under Rule 6 / state law

Good-faith vs. manufactured-default analysis

Common Risks We Identify

Cure period below state statutory minimum

Default amount inflated or unsupported

Service to wrong/outdated address

Deadline falls on weekend without extension

Demand for non-curable conditions framed as curable

Hypothetical Case Study by Justee

Justee recently analyzed a 5-day cure notice for "operational defaults" in a 10-year ground lease for a commercial tenant operating a small restaurant in Brooklyn, NY served with a 5-day cure notice.

Issue Found: The cure notice listed three "defaults" without specifics, set a 5-day cure window despite the lease requiring 30 days, and was served by email rather than the certified-mail-with-return-receipt method required in the lease. The tenant could have been wrongfully evicted on a defective notice.

Justee Recommendation: We responded with a notice of defects, demanded a properly served 30-day notice with specifics, and reserved all rights. The landlord re-served properly; meanwhile the tenant cured the only legitimate default within the proper period.

Defective Cure Notice

Problematic Language

"Tenant is in default of various provisions of the Lease. Tenant has five (5) days to cure or this Lease shall terminate."

Recommended Language

"Pursuant to Section 14(b) of the Lease, Tenant is in default of the following specific provisions: (1) Section 5.2 — failure to pay base rent of $8,400 due February 1, 2026; (2) Section 9.1 — failure to maintain general liability insurance evidenced by COI delivered to Landlord. Tenant shall have thirty (30) days from the date of this notice (until [date]) to cure each default. This notice is served by certified mail return receipt requested as required by Section 22.3 of the Lease."

Why it matters: Cure notices must identify the default with specificity, the cure period required by the lease and applicable statute, and be served by the agreed method. Defective notices may be void and create wrongful-eviction liability.

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"Justee is redefining the legal document compliance process across all practice areas, transforming hours of work into minutes, while reducing stress and boosting accuracy."

Artem Dolukhanyan
Artem Dolukhanyan

Partner, Corporate Transactions at Grayver Law Group

AI Review vs. Manual Review

FeatureJustee AI ReviewManual Review
Review Time2-5 minutes2-4 hours
CostFree trial available$150-500+
Legal CitationsAutomaticVaries by reviewer
Clause SuggestionsIncludedExtra fee
Availability24/7 instantBusiness hours
* Comparison data represents estimates based on industry research and internal testing for typical contract types. Review times, costs, and accuracy percentages vary by document complexity, length, jurisdiction, and specific legal requirements. See full disclaimer below.

Official Resources

HUD Tenant Rights

HUD overview of tenant rights

CFPB Mortgage Servicing

CFPB Regulation X servicing rules

Cornell Law: Notice to Cure

Legal definition of notice to quit/cure

Important Legal Disclaimer

Not Legal Advice: The information and analysis provided by Justee AI is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. While we strive to provide accurate and helpful information, our AI-powered service is not a substitute for professional legal counsel.

No Attorney-Client Relationship: Use of Justee AI does not create an attorney-client relationship. Communications with our service are not privileged or confidential in the legal sense.

Consult a Professional: For specific legal matters, we strongly recommend consulting with a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction. Legal requirements vary by location and circumstances, and only a licensed attorney can provide advice tailored to your specific situation.

Performance Estimates (*): All statistics, metrics, and numerical claims on this page — including review times, cost comparisons, accuracy percentages, and database size — are estimates based on internal testing, industry research, and typical use cases. Actual results vary based on document type, complexity, length, jurisdiction, and other factors. Cost comparisons reference publicly available average attorney rates and are not guaranteed savings. "1M+ laws and regulations" refers to the breadth of Justee's reference database and does not imply that every provision is checked against every law for every document.

By using our service, you acknowledge that you have read and agree to our Terms of Use and understand the limitations of AI-powered legal analysis. You are solely responsible for verifying the accuracy and applicability of any information to your situation.

Notice to Cure Letter Review FAQ

It depends on the operative contract and state law. Residential leases typically require 3–14 days for non-payment; commercial leases vary widely (10–60 days). Justee flags shorter-than-required periods.

Yes. Vague notices are commonly held defective. Justee verifies that the default, dollar amount, deadline, and cure standard are all stated.

Many leases require certified mail or personal service. Email service may be defective unless the lease explicitly authorizes it. Justee flags service-method mismatches.

Yes. Justee reviews cure letters drafted by tenants/borrowers/parties responding to the other side. The same statutory and contractual rules apply.

Possible consequences include eviction, foreclosure, lease termination, or contract default judgment. Justee flags whether the underlying claim is curable and identifies defenses.

Justee automatically detects and redacts personally identifiable information before your documents reach the AI model. Protected types include:

Personal data:
  • Names, email addresses, and phone numbers
  • Social Security numbers and tax identifiers (ITIN)
  • Physical addresses and dates of birth
  • Credit card and bank account numbers
  • Driver's license and passport numbers
  • Medical provider identifiers (NPI) and case numbers
Corporate and business data:
  • Company and organization names
  • Business addresses and geographic locations
  • SWIFT/BIC codes, IBAN numbers, and bank routing numbers
  • Business license numbers and attorney bar IDs
  • Corporate tax identifiers (EIN)
Our system achieves 100% detection of standard PII types and approximately 97% overall coverage. Certain rare identifiers — such as cryptocurrency wallet addresses and MAC addresses — may not be detected automatically. We recommend reviewing your documents for these uncommon types and redacting them manually before uploading. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use for details and limitations.

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Last updated: May 13, 2026

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