Free until your first
100 clients.
Earn your subscription via the work your system does.
Flight Path Tiers
Automatic tier upgrades based on 90-day active client count. Platform fee (drag) decreases as you gain altitude.
Launchpad
Start free until 100 clients. Keep 100% revenue.
Start FreeAscent
Climb phase. Platform fee applies as you scale.
Start FreeStratos
Cruising altitude. Lower platform fee at scale.
Start FreeMach
Command altitude. Maximum partner revenue share.
Start FreeOptional: Specialist Mode
Scale capacity without building a team. Specialist Mode is an optional monthly subscription that lets Operators delegate letter QA, round prep, and response classification to certified specialists.
View Specialist Plans & PricingCompare DisputeJet
See how DisputeJet compares to alternatives, competitors, and different approaches to credit repair operations.
View All ComparisonsPricing FAQ
When do I start paying?
You start paying platform fees when you reach 100 active clients (clients who paid for a round in the last 90 days). Until then, you keep 100% of revenue.
What happens at 100 clients?
Your tier automatically upgrades to Ascent (35% platform fee). Tiers are calculated daily based on your 90-day active client count.
Is there a contract?
No long-term contracts. You can cancel anytime. Platform fees are calculated per transaction, so you only pay when clients pay.
How are active clients calculated?
An active client is any client who paid for a dispute round in the last 90 days. This metric is calculated automatically and updates daily. Your tier (altitude) is recalculated automatically based on this count.
Do I control my pricing?
Yes. Operators set their own per-round pricing for clients. DisputeJet takes a percentage of that revenue based on your Flight Path tier. Platform fee (drag) decreases as you gain altitude.
What happens when I reach a new tier?
Tier upgrades (clearance) happen automatically when you cross the client count threshold. Your platform fee percentage decreases immediately. No action required—the system handles it automatically.