Lawsuit Cash 24/7 is a settlement funding company based in Los Angeles, California, operating at 714 W Olympic, Suite 640. The company was founded on the principle that injury victims should receive compensation quickly rather than waiting months or years for case resolution. They specialize in providing cash advances against pending lawsuit settlements, allowing claimants to cover living expenses and medical bills while their cases proceed through the legal system.
The company offers two primary products: pre-settlement funding (cash advances before a case settles) and post-settlement funding (funding after settlement terms are agreed but before distribution). They accept cases involving motor vehicle accidents, motorcycle accidents, pedestrian injuries, bicycle accidents, slip-and-fall claims, dog bites, rideshare accidents, medical malpractice, and wrongful death cases. They explicitly do not fund workers' compensation cases. Applicants can request advances ranging from partial amounts to their maximum offer of $100,000, with funding promised within 24 hours of attorney contact.
Lawsuit Cash 24/7 distinguishes itself through an unusually applicant-friendly underwriting model. They advertise that credit scores and employment verification are not required for approval, and the application process takes less than 60 seconds. Their contingent repayment structure—where clients owe nothing if they lose their case—transfers litigation risk to the funder rather than the borrower. They also market attorney guidance services for clients without legal representation.
However, prospective clients should recognize that lawsuit funding is not traditional lending and involves significant trade-offs. While the company does not disclose specific interest rates or fees on their website, settlement funding typically involves substantial discounts from the anticipated settlement amount (often 30-50% or more), making the effective cost substantially higher than conventional loans. The company's marketing emphasizes speed and accessibility rather than affordability, and borrowers forfeit a portion of their ultimate settlement to access early funds.