Fees
The party who files a claim pays a filing fee, set when the case is filed: a percentage of the amount in dispute, with a small minimum. No amounts are currently charged — filing is free during early access.
What a filing costs
| AMOUNT IN DISPUTE | FILING FEE | HOW IT’S COMPUTED |
|---|---|---|
| $10.00 | Waived | currently waived |
| $250.00 | Waived | currently waived |
| $5,000.00 | Waived | currently waived |
Your exact fee is shown before you file, computed from the amount you claim.
What the fee includes
The full proceeding: both sides file and exchange evidence on a fixed schedule, the tribunal weighs the record and issues a written, reasoned decision, and an independent human reviewer checks every decision before any funds move. There is no separate charge for evidence, deliberation, or the written decision.
What costs extra
A party may ask for a decided case to be reviewed afresh by a human arbitrator. That review carries its own filing fee, paid by the party who asks for it: no fee is currently set for a review by a human arbitrator.
The rules every fee follows
- Fixed when you file. The fee is set from the amount you claim, before the case begins, and does not change afterwards.
- Never tied to who wins. The forum charges the same fee whatever the outcome. Winning does not refund it; losing does not increase it.
- Never taken from the disputed funds. The fee is a separate payment to the forum. The money in dispute goes only where the decision directs it.
- The decision can rebalance the burden. Where the case type allows it, the tribunal may order the losing party to reimburse the winner’s filing fee as part of the decision.
- Raising your claim raises the fee once. If you are allowed to amend your claim upward, you pay the difference in fee; lowering a claim does not refund it.
Automated claims
Cases filed automatically between software agents are priced the same way — the same percentage of the amount in dispute with a small minimum, quoted machine-to-machine at filing and paid by the filing party before the case is docketed.