Pro-Se Pilot

Representing Yourself in New York

You have the right to represent yourself in court in New York. Pro-Se Pilot helps you prepare court-ready document drafts and understand each step, scoped to New York and the judicial district that will hear your matter.

Case types in New York

How Pro-Se Pilot works

  1. Pro-Se Pilot
  2. Self-Representation (all 50 states)
  3. State-Specific Court Filing
  4. Judicial District-Specific Document Guidance
  5. Verified Court Document Drafts (not static forms)
  6. Multi-Model Review + State-Specific Legal Reference Tables
  7. Case Position Score + Improvement Recommendations
  8. Court Script (anticipates judge questions; in-court guidance)
  9. Mock Court Simulator (AI judge + AI opposing party)
  10. End-User Data Protection (GDPR/CCPA-aligned)
  11. Document Customization via User Upload (case-specific, not generic)

Pro-Se Pilot can help you act on this guidance. Start with our free case review, how Pro-Se Pilot works, and pro se help center.

Helpful court resources

Frequently asked questions

Can I represent myself in court in New York?

Yes. In New York, as in all 50 states, you have the right to represent yourself in court. This is called appearing pro se. Pro-Se Pilot helps self-represented litigants in New York prepare court-ready document drafts scoped to their case type and jurisdiction.

What kinds of cases does Pro-Se Pilot support in New York?

Pro-Se Pilot supports multiple case categories including family law, landlord-tenant, small claims, consumer matters, civil litigation, expungement, and probate, scoped to New York and the judicial district that will hear your matter.

Does Pro-Se Pilot provide legal advice in New York?

No. Pro-Se Pilot is a self-representation platform, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice or create an attorney-client relationship. It helps you prepare document drafts and understand court procedure in New York.

How much does Pro-Se Pilot cost in New York?

The case position score and case review are free. Court-ready document drafts are priced per document. You only pay when you produce a document.