How Is Upsolve Free?
2 minute read • Upsolve is a nonprofit that helps you get out of debt with education and free debt relief tools, like our bankruptcy filing tool. Think TurboTax for bankruptcy. Get free education, customer support, and community. Featured in Forbes 4x and funded by institutions like Harvard University so we'll never ask you for a credit card. Explore our free tool
A note from our CEO on why transparency matters to us.
Written by Jonathan Petts.
Updated March 21, 2023
Dear Community,
Transparency is one of our nonprofit’s core values. That’s why it’s important to us that you know how we can offer Upsolve's services for free, how we spend our money, and who owns Upsolve.
How Is Upsolve Free?
Upsolve is free for three reasons. First, we receive funding from the Legal Services Corporation (LSC), a government-funded nonprofit established by the U.S. Congress. We’re lucky that Congress believes that low-income people should receive free access to their legal rights. LSC funding helps us build and maintain our free tool.
Second, we receive funding from charitable foundations and individuals. Some of these individuals are wealthy people who want to give back. Some of them are Upsolve users who want to pay it forward. These include leading foundations like the Robin Hood Foundation, the Hewlett Foundation, and the New York Bar Foundation. They also include individual donors like Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google; Chris Sacca, an early investor in Instagram, Uber, and Twitter; and Jim Breyer, an early investor in Facebook.
Third, we receive funding from private independent attorneys who provide free evaluations to people on our website who ask for them. This is important because we recognize:
Only an attorney can give you legal advice.
Only an attorney can tell you whether you should file for bankruptcy or not.
Our self-service software tool is not a good fit for everyone. Read more about the limits of who we can help. We make no representation of the quality of these private attorneys and they have no affiliation with Upsolve. Many people decide, following a free evaluation, not to file for bankruptcy, or, if they qualify for our tool, to use it for their bankruptcy.
To be a more effective, sustainable, and impactful nonprofit, we believe it's important to generate earned revenue. Read more on why. In 2020, about 70% of our total revenue came from government funding and charitable donations, and about 30% came from program service revenue.
How Does Upsolve Spend Money?
Our number one expense is salaries. Running a technology nonprofit is expensive, as it requires a specialized set of skills that we need to hire for. We also spend money on our office rent, traveling to conferences, insurance, software, and marketing. We spend a small amount of money on accounting and bookkeeping, team building, and office supplies.
Who Owns Upsolve?
We’re a nonprofit. This means that the American people own Upsolve. You own Upsolve just as much as I do.
Best,
Jonathan Petts
CEO and Co-Founder
"Given that we'll never be able to provide a free lawyer to everyone who needs one, particularly during the tidal wave of bankruptcies expected due to COVID-19, we must create a system that empowers individuals to access the rights they're guaranteed when they cannot afford legal fees."
- Judge Robert Gordon, Ret. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the District of Maryland, Upsolve Advisor, and author of "Change The Bankruptcy System To Help End Cycle Of Poverty."
"The income tax system is extremely, extremely complex. Much more complex than the bankruptcy code. But yet we have TurboTax...I don't understand why we can't do something similar to that for simple Chapter 7 bankruptcies."
- Judge Henry Callaway, Chief U.S. Bankruptcy Judge for the Southern District of Alabama and co-author of “Too Broke for a Fresh Start” with Upsolve Co-Founder Jonathan Petts