
Contract Detective: AI review
Spot hidden risks & negotiate contracts like a pro.
2 followers
Spot hidden risks & negotiate contracts like a pro.
2 followers
For an introvert, the real torture is the confrontation. Contract Detective is your social armor. Standout Features: Negotiation Logic: Generates professional questions to challenge risks without the "fight." Introvert-Friendly: Pre-written Email/Slack templates to address issues with zero social anxiety. Native & Private: Swift + Gemini API. We analyze intent, but never store your data for training.






Hey PH!
I'm Roy.N, a mobile developer who genuinely hates reading contracts — it feels like pure torture. Three months ago, I signed a 6-page lease without reading it to the end. A month later, a hidden clause quietly cost me an entire month’s rent. That painful lesson pushed me to build Contract Detective.
It's a clean, fast, Swift-native iOS app that acts as your personal second pair of eyes. Simply scan a document, snap a photo, or upload a PDF — it instantly flags risky clauses like auto-renewals, unfair penalties, termination traps, and hidden fees. At the same time, it translates everything into clear, plain English, generates smart questions you can ask the other party, and provides ready-to-use negotiation templates to help you communicate with confidence.
Privacy-first by design: powered by Gemini API, but your documents are never stored, logged, or used for anything else. No accounts, no bloat, no clutter — just a lightning-quick tool that feels great on your iPhone.I’ve always believed the best products come from solving your own real frustrations. This one definitely did.
By the way, every new user gets 5 free credits — enough to try the app 5 times completely free.
I’ve always believed the best products come from solving your own real frustrations. This one definitely did.
Contract Detective is now live on the App Store.
If you also dread reading long contracts, I’d love for you to give it a try. Happy to chat about the prompt engineering behind it, the Swift architecture, or why we should never blindly sign a 6-page lease again.