JPClaimReady TX

Templates & Kits

Texas Small Business Collections Pack

Get paid: contracts, escalating demand letters, and a guide to suing a business.

Legal information only: This site provides legal information for Texas Justice Court users. It is not legal advice, does not create an attorney-client relationship, and does not replace advice from a licensed Texas attorney or instructions from your court. County and precinct practices vary. Filing methods, local forms, service fees, court closures, and clerk procedures can change. Always verify details with the correct Justice of the Peace court before filing or relying on a deadline.

About this kit

An editable Texas independent contractor agreement to prevent the next dispute, an unpaid-invoice demand letter, a firmer final-notice-before-filing letter, and a guide to suing a business in Texas Justice Court — including how to identify the right legal entity and registered agent before you file.

Naming the wrong defendant is one of the most common and costly small-claims mistakes for business disputes. The included guide walks through the free and low-cost official lookups to get it right.

Every document includes the ClaimReady TX legal-information disclaimer. These are self-help templates and organizers, not legal advice, and no attorney-client relationship is created.

Who it's for: Freelancers, contractors, and small businesses chasing unpaid invoices.

What's inside

4 documents, each delivered as editable DOCX and printable PDF.

  • Texas Independent Contractor Agreement
  • Texas Demand Letter — Unpaid Invoice
  • Final Notice Before Filing Suit
  • Suing a Business in Texas Justice Court

Legal information, not legal advice

These documents help you organize, demand, and prepare. They do not evaluate your case, predict outcomes, or replace your county's official court forms — when your JP court publishes a form, use the court's version. For advice about your specific situation, talk to a licensed Texas attorney.