Pro-Se Pilot

Representing Yourself in Washington

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

Case types in Washington

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 Washington?

Yes. In Washington, 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 Washington prepare court-ready document drafts scoped to their case type and jurisdiction.

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

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

Does Pro-Se Pilot provide legal advice in Washington?

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 Washington.

How much does Pro-Se Pilot cost in Washington?

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.