Corporate process service has two failure modes. The first is serving the wrong entity — the service is void, the defendant is never legally notified, and opposing counsel’s motion to dismiss succeeds. The second is late service — the statute of limitations has run, the FRCP 4(m) 90-day clock has expired, or the TRO hearing begins before service is confirmed. Both failure modes end cases. Both are avoidable. Call (800) 774-6922 when a corporate service deadline is in play — we run entity verification and dispatch in parallel, not sequentially.
The paradox of fast corporate service is this: skipping entity verification to move faster usually produces more total delay. A process server who delivers papers to the wrong registered agent — because the entity changed agents since the complaint was filed — produces an affidavit that is technically defective. The defendant files a motion to dismiss for insufficient service. The motion succeeds. Now service must be re-done from scratch, with the clock still running and the original service date gone. Undisputed Legal resolves this paradox by running entity verification and server dispatch simultaneously — our entity research protocols complete in minutes, not hours, and dispatch proceeds the moment the verification is confirmed.
A process server cannot simply drive to “Chase Bank” or “Amazon” and hand over papers. Corporate service involves friction points that add time to every engagement. Most of that friction is unavoidable — but it can be compressed when a firm has the infrastructure to handle multiple steps in parallel rather than sequentially.
Friction point 1: Entity verification. Before dispatch, the correct registered agent must be confirmed from the current Secretary of State database — not from the attorney’s working file or from a prior affidavit. Commercial registered agents change. CT Corporation System, CSC, and NRAI compete for corporate clients, and companies switch agents on contract renewals, corporate restructurings, and governance changes. An entity that used CT Corporation twelve months ago may have switched to CSC last quarter. The entity verification query takes minutes with the right protocol; building that protocol from scratch on a time-sensitive matter takes much longer.
Friction point 2: Registered agent address confirmation. Commercial registered agent offices occasionally relocate. CT Corporation and CSC have moved within cities as their commercial leases have changed. The current registered agent address must be confirmed against the live SoS database, not from memory or prior paperwork. Beyond address: commercial agent offices have specific intake hours. A server dispatched at 4:45 PM to an office that closes at 5:00 PM may not complete service that day. Knowing office hours for every major commercial agent office in every state is operational infrastructure — not something improvised under pressure.
Friction point 3: Document review. Before delivering papers to a commercial registered agent, the entity name on the summons must match the entity name in the state’s entity database. A discrepancy — “Corp.” vs. “Corporation,” trade name vs. legal name, parent entity vs. operating subsidiary — creates a service defect that will be identified by a commercial agent’s intake team or raised by defense counsel. Catching and resolving discrepancies before dispatch is faster than catching them after delivery. Our entity-type service guide covers the naming issue in detail.
Friction point 4: Geographic coordination. Service in multiple states on the same day requires servers who are physically available at the right location at the right time. It also requires that each commercial agent office in each state is open and accessible during the delivery window. Undisputed Legal maintains a nationwide server network covering all 50 states specifically because multi-state coordination on short notice is a core use case for complex corporate service. For multi-entity and multi-jurisdiction engagements, this coordination is pre-planned — not improvised the morning of dispatch.
Speed in corporate process service is not about skipping steps — it is about compressing the time each step takes through infrastructure built specifically for fast corporate delivery. Undisputed Legal’s speed capability rests on four components.
Pre-loaded entity verification protocols. Our SoS database query protocol covers all 50 states and is designed to return the critical fields — entity legal name, current status, registered agent name, and registered agent address — in minutes. For the most frequently served entities (major national corporations, institutional defendants), this turnaround is faster still. Entity verification does not delay dispatch; it runs in the same workflow that confirms the documents are correctly addressed, so that dispatch and verification complete together.
Nationwide server network. Undisputed Legal maintains process servers in all 50 states with specific coverage at the commercial registered agent offices — CT Corporation, CSC, NRAI — that receive the highest volume of corporate service. Our servers at these offices know the intake protocols, the building access requirements, and the cutoff times for same-day receipt. When a same-day dispatch is needed at CT Corporation’s 28 Liberty Street (New York), at CSC in Wilmington, or at CT Corporation’s Chicago or Los Angeles offices, a server is available without the delay of sourcing a local contact at the last minute.
Pre-confirmed office access. High-volume commercial registered agent offices — particularly those in commercial skyscrapers — have building security protocols that add time to delivery. CT Corporation at 28 Liberty Street in Manhattan requires security clearance before a server can reach the intake floor. CSC’s Wilmington office has established intake procedures. Knowing these requirements in advance and accounting for them in the dispatch schedule is part of Undisputed Legal’s operational preparation. A server who arrives at a high-rise commercial agent office without accounting for 15-minute security clearance has effectively lost that 15 minutes from the delivery window.
Same-day affidavit preparation. GPS-verified affidavits are prepared and electronically delivered to counsel on the same day as service completion when delivery occurs before our affidavit preparation cutoff, or the following morning for late-day deliveries. Multi-entity affidavit packages for parallel same-day engagements are coordinated and formatted consistently so counsel receives a complete evidentiary record ready for filing, not a collection of documents arriving at different times from different locations.
Routine service is the correct choice when no active deadline requires acceleration. The $100–$150 routine tier delivers: entity verification, document review, confirmed registered agent address, physical delivery within 3–7 business days, commercial agent receipt capture, and GPS-verified affidavit. Those 3–7 business days are not dead time — they are the verification, scheduling, and delivery sequence executed without the premium that rush or same-day service requires.
When routine is right. A newly filed complaint with a 90-day service window under FRCP 4(m). An entity served as part of a civil investigation where a specific return date is weeks away. A subpoena with a compliance date 30 days out. Routine service on these matters produces the same GPS-verified affidavit and the same verified entity confirmation as rush service — at a cost appropriate to the timeline. Spending rush budget when no deadline is imminent is a resource allocation error. Routine service is not inferior service; it is correctly scoped service.
Routine service on multi-state defendants. For defendants registered in multiple states where the same 3–7-day window applies across all locations, routine service can coordinate parallel delivery across states within the same window without the premium required for same-day multi-state coordination. This is the most cost-effective approach for complex corporate defendants when timing is not the primary constraint.
Rush service at $200–$250 is appropriate when the answer period has already begun running and an early service date matters for briefing alignment, when a scheduled court conference requires confirmed service beforehand, or when the FRCP 4(m) 90-day window is narrowing to the point where routine service’s 3–7-day timeline creates unnecessary risk.
The answer-period acceleration use case. FRCP 12(a)(1)(A) gives a defendant 21 days from service to respond in federal court; CPLR 3012(c) gives 20 days in New York state court. In matters where plaintiff’s counsel wants to accelerate the briefing schedule — TRO proceedings, injunctive relief motions, cases with imminent trial dates — getting service confirmed within 24–48 hours rather than 3–7 business days starts the clock earlier and tightens the defendant’s response window.
Multi-entity rush service. When multiple corporate defendants must be served on a compressed timeline — parent and operating subsidiary, or multiple defendants in different states — rush service coordinates parallel dispatch across all registered agent offices. Each entity receives separate entity verification, separate GPS-verified delivery, and a separate affidavit. The affidavit package returns to counsel as a unified set with delivery dates as close together as the geographic and logistical constraints allow. For the most demanding multi-entity coordination, see our advanced corporate service guide.
The FRCP 4(m) countdown. FRCP 4(m) requires service within 90 days of complaint filing. When the 90-day window is within two weeks and no service has been completed, routine service introduces unnecessary exposure. Rush service at 24–48 hours first attempt provides a substantial buffer. If rush service encounters an obstacle — wrong agent identified, entity status issue, building access delay — there is still time to resolve it and complete service within the window.
Same-day service at $250–$300 is attempted when documents are received during normal business hours and delivery at a commercial registered agent office or corporate location is needed before close of business the same day. The most common scenario: attorney files or finalizes a complaint in the morning, needs service confirmed before an afternoon or next-day court event, or is racing a statute of limitations that expires at midnight.
What same-day service requires. For same-day delivery to be attempted, several conditions must be in place: (1) documents are received by Undisputed Legal early enough in the business day for dispatch before the registered agent office closes; (2) entity verification can confirm the current registered agent address without a protracted discrepancy resolution; (3) the commercial registered agent office in the relevant city is open and accessible for the delivery window; (4) building access or security clearance at high-rise commercial agent offices can be completed within the delivery window. Same-day service on a defendant whose registered agent is in a different time zone requires accounting for time zone differences in the dispatch window — a 2 PM call in New York leaves a narrow window for same-day delivery at a Pacific time zone registered agent office. Consult a licensed attorney regarding deadlines and applicable tolling rules before relying on any specific service date.
The statute of limitations scenario. When a statute of limitations expires the same day service is needed, the calculation involves not only the process service but the filing requirement in the relevant jurisdiction. In New York, BCL § 306-b requires service within 120 days of the filing of a summons; separate statutes govern when a cause of action is “commenced” for limitations purposes. In federal court, the filing of the complaint ordinarily commences the action for limitations purposes even before service — but state court rules vary. The same-day service call when a limitation period is expiring should be preceded by a call to litigation counsel confirming that service today — rather than filing today — is the operative deadline. Undisputed Legal will attempt same-day delivery whenever the logistics permit; whether same-day delivery satisfies a specific limitations rule is a legal question for counsel.
TRO and preliminary injunction service. A temporary restraining order (TRO) motion filed ex parte — without notice — does not require prior service. But a preliminary injunction hearing requires notice to the defendant, which in most courts means confirmed service before the hearing date. If a TRO is granted with a hearing set for 48–72 hours out, getting service on the corporate defendant confirmed within that window may require same-day or rush service depending on the court’s schedule. Undisputed Legal coordinates TRO-related corporate service with the understanding that the hearing date is the hard deadline, and dispatch is planned to ensure affidavits are in counsel’s hands before the hearing.
At $325–$425 (including one hour waiting time; each additional hour $100–$150), stake-out and emergency service addresses situations where the speed obstacle is not logistics but access. A commercial registered agent office with unusual building restrictions. An officer service at a corporate campus where the officer’s schedule must be accommodated. A high-security facility where clearance takes longer than anticipated. Multiple prior attempts documented and a court-ordered alternative service motion being prepared.
Extended wait at commercial agent offices. Some commercial registered agent offices — particularly those in high-security financial district buildings — require extended security clearance that may not be predictable from the outside. When a process server arrives and encounters an unexpected security delay, the stake-out tier provides for the waiting time that a standard delivery fee does not include. The GPS-verified record documents the arrival time, the wait, and the final delivery time — all of which is relevant to a dispute about whether service was timely completed during business hours.
Documentation for alternative service motions. When repeated attempts at a corporate defendant’s registered agent have failed — agent relocated without state update, office closed for extended period, building access consistently refused — the GPS-verified attempt records from each attempt form the documented predicate for a motion for alternative service. Courts reviewing alternative service motions look for evidence that standard methods were attempted with due diligence. A GPS-verified record of multiple attempts, with timestamps and coordinates documenting each visit, satisfies that standard more robustly than an affiant’s recollection alone.
Not all corporate service engagements are time-sensitive. When one of the following four deadline categories is present, service speed directly affects case outcome.
Category 1: Statute of limitations. A cause of action that is time-barred cannot be revived by a subsequent service. In most jurisdictions, the action is “commenced” — and the statute tolled — by the filing of the complaint, not by service. But state-specific rules vary: in New York state court, an action is commenced by filing, but service must follow within 120 days under CPLR 306-b or the action may be dismissed. The window between filing and service is thus doubly constrained: the statute of limitations is tolled at filing, but service must still be completed within the statutory window or the case may be dismissed. Call Undisputed Legal as soon as the complaint is filed — not after several weeks have elapsed.
Category 2: FRCP 4(m) — the 90-day service clock. Federal Rule 4(m) requires service within 90 days of complaint filing in federal court. If service is not completed within 90 days and the plaintiff cannot show good cause for the failure, the court may dismiss the action without prejudice — but a dismissal without prejudice may be effectively final if the statute of limitations has since run. The international service exemption under FRCP 4(f)(1) removes Hague Convention service from the 4(m) clock — but only when that international service has been properly initiated. Domestic corporate service has no equivalent exemption: the 90-day clock runs regardless. For defendants registered in multiple states where multi-state coordination is needed, planning service well before day 80 is the professional standard.
Category 3: TRO and preliminary injunction hearings. Preliminary injunction proceedings require the defendant to have notice before the hearing — which means confirmed service must precede the hearing date. In practice, courts schedule preliminary injunction hearings on short notice after granting a TRO, and the window for service may be 48–72 hours. The commercial registered agent is the fastest route to confirmed service on most corporate defendants: delivery is clean, receipted, and produces an affidavit same-day. Officer or director service at corporate headquarters is slower and requires locating a specific individual. When a PI hearing is scheduled, Undisputed Legal’s rush or same-day service tiers provide the tightest delivery windows.
Category 4: Discovery and subpoena deadlines. A subpoena served on a corporate non-party imposes a compliance deadline — typically 14 days for document production under FRCP 45(d)(3), or a court-specified date for deposition subpoenas. The clock on the corporate non-party’s response starts at service. Serving a subpoena on a corporate defendant’s registered agent late in the discovery period compresses the response window and may create grounds for a motion for extension of the discovery cutoff. Early service of subpoenas on corporate non-parties — particularly institutional defendants with large document collections — gives both sides time to negotiate scope, respond to objections, and produce compliant materials before the discovery deadline.
Speed without legal validity is not fast service — it is a first attempt that will need to be repeated. A defective corporate service affidavit does not start the clock, does not satisfy the statutory requirement, and does not protect against a motion to dismiss. Getting service right the first time is, in every case, faster than getting it wrong and doing it again. Consult a licensed attorney to confirm the applicable service rules and deadlines for your specific matter before ordering.
The compliance checklist that runs with every service. At Undisputed Legal, entity verification and document review are not optional steps that slow down dispatch — they are part of the dispatch workflow, completed in parallel with server scheduling, not sequentially before it. The checklist: (1) entity legal name confirmed from current SoS database; (2) entity status active or fallback service method confirmed; (3) current registered agent name and address confirmed; (4) entity name on summons matches SoS record exactly; (5) authorized recipient for the entity type confirmed; (6) GPS-verified affidavit format ready for completion at delivery. Each of these steps, done correctly, is a defense against a specific motion-to-dismiss ground.
Why “fast but defective” is slower than “correct.” A motion to dismiss for insufficient service of process under FRCP 12(b)(5) does not automatically extend the plaintiff’s service deadline. If the motion is granted and the 90-day FRCP 4(m) window has expired, the action may be dismissed. If the statute of limitations has since run, re-service is barred. The cost of a defective first service attempt is not just the cost of re-service — it is the full litigation timeline risk of a dismissed case. For a complete breakdown of entity types and their specific service requirements, see our guide to serving business entities.
The affidavit of service is the documentary evidence that service occurred. In time-sensitive matters, counsel needs the affidavit in hand quickly — to file with the court, to attach to a preliminary injunction motion, or to confirm service before a scheduled conference. Undisputed Legal prepares GPS-verified affidavits for electronic delivery to counsel on the same business day as service completion for morning and midday deliveries, or the following morning for late-afternoon deliveries.
What GPS-verified affidavits contain. Every Undisputed Legal business entity affidavit documents: the entity’s exact registered legal name and the registered agent designation under which service was made; the name and role of the representative who accepted the papers; the specific documents served; the exact time and date of delivery; GPS coordinates confirming the delivery location matches the registered address; and the process server’s name and credentials, including DCWP license number for any service in New York City’s five boroughs. For registered agent deliveries at commercial offices — CT Corporation, CSC, NRAI — the written receipt issued at the time of service is obtained and referenced in the affidavit as corroborating evidence.
Multi-entity affidavit packages. For parallel same-day service on multiple corporate defendants, Undisputed Legal returns a coordinated affidavit package with one affidavit per entity, organized by entity and by state, with consistent formatting. This package is designed for direct filing and is ready to be attached to a motion or filed as proof of service without additional assembly by counsel’s office. Call (800) 774-6922 for multi-entity same-day coordination or to confirm the cutoff time for same-day dispatch in a specific city.
Every fee tier includes entity verification, document addressing review, physical delivery to the registered agent or other authorized recipient, GPS-verified affidavit of service, and commercial agent receipt capture where applicable. The tier determines the speed of first attempt — everything else is consistent across tiers.
Routine Service — $100–$150. First attempt within 3–7 business days. The correct choice when no active deadline requires acceleration and the full window is available for scheduling and delivery.
Rush Service — $200–$250. First attempt within 24–48 business hours. When the answer period has started, the FRCP 4(m) clock is within two weeks, or a court event requires confirmed service in the near term.
Same-Day Service — $250–$300. First attempt the same business day when documents are received during normal business hours. For statute of limitations situations, TRO-related service, and any matter where same-day delivery is operationally required. Subject to registered agent office hours and geographic dispatch logistics.
Email / Mail Service — $75. Where permitted; completed within 24–48 business hours from receipt. For jurisdictions where the applicable rule or statute expressly authorizes mail service on a registered agent and counsel has confirmed this method is sufficient.
Stake-Out Service — $325–$425. Includes 1 hour waiting time; each additional hour $100–$150. For extended access situations, officer service requiring a scheduled appearance, or repeated-attempt scenarios requiring documented GPS-verified records for an alternative service motion.
Select your service speed below. For time-sensitive matters — statute of limitations, same-day TRO service, or multi-state parallel service — call us before ordering so we can confirm cutoff times and dispatch logistics for your specific jurisdiction and registered agent location.
The fastest service is the service that holds up — the delivery that produces an affidavit that opposing counsel cannot attack, that correctly identifies the served entity, and that documents the delivery to an authorized recipient at the confirmed registered address. Undisputed Legal's speed infrastructure exists to compress the time between the client's call and the confirmed delivery, not to eliminate the steps that make the delivery legally valid.
Cross-references for complete corporate service guidance. For the entity-type rules that govern who is an authorized recipient for each business form — corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, general partnerships, and sole proprietorships — see our guide to serving business entities. For multi-entity, multi-jurisdiction, and international service strategies in complex corporate litigation, see our advanced corporate process service guide. For the specific intake protocols and office locations at CT Corporation System in all 15 major states, see our CT Corporation service guide. For the legal framework governing how registered agent service operates within civil procedure, see our registered agent framework guide.
The cutoff time depends on the registered agent office location, the city, and the building's security protocols. For CT Corporation's 28 Liberty Street office in Manhattan, delivery must be initiated with enough time to clear building security and reach the intake floor before the office closes — typically by early-to-mid afternoon to allow for transit and clearance time from our end. For registered agent offices in other cities, the cutoff depends on local office hours and dispatch travel time. The most reliable approach for same-day service is to contact Undisputed Legal as early in the business day as possible — a 9 AM call about same-day service allows for entity verification, document review, and dispatch well within the delivery window. A 4 PM call for same-day service may not allow sufficient time depending on the city and office. Call before placing the order if the same-day window is tight.
Yes — with advance coordination. Same-day multi-state service requires dispatching servers at each registered agent location simultaneously, which means entity verification and document review for each entity must be completed before any dispatch occurs. For two to four defendants in different states on the same day, this is logistically feasible with a morning call and documents in hand by a reasonable cutoff. For five or more defendants across multiple states on the same day, advance coordination of a day or more is advisable to confirm server availability and office hours at each location. Undisputed Legal coordinates multi-state same-day engagements with a unified affidavit package returned to counsel as a single set. Contact us before placing the order for multi-state same-day coordination.
This is the highest-urgency corporate service scenario. The first question — which should be resolved with litigation counsel before calling a process server — is whether the statute is tolled by filing alone or requires service within the same day. In federal court and in most states, filing the complaint tolls the limitations period regardless of when service is completed; the service window is then governed by FRCP 4(m) or the applicable state equivalent. If this is correct for your jurisdiction, filing today preserves the claim and same-day service is a best-practice but not strictly required. If your jurisdiction requires service within a specific number of days of filing and that window also closes today, you need same-day service. Call Undisputed Legal immediately with the entity information — we will confirm the current registered agent, confirm our same-day dispatch capability for the relevant city and office, and advise whether same-day delivery is achievable given the current time. We will not promise what we cannot accomplish within the available window, but we will tell you exactly what is possible.
Entity verification is included in every Undisputed Legal service tier — routine, rush, same-day, and stake-out. The rush service fee covers entity database query, document review, dispatch scheduling, physical delivery within 24–48 business hours, GPS-verified affidavit, and commercial agent receipt capture. You do not need to separately arrange entity verification. However, if you have already confirmed the current registered agent and have a specific address you want us to verify or proceed with, providing that information speeds up our review. What you should always provide: the entity's exact legal name as it appears in the complaint, the state of registration you want us to serve in, and the documents to be served. We handle the verification and confirm the result before dispatch.
For morning and midday deliveries, GPS-verified affidavits are prepared and electronically delivered to counsel on the same business day as service completion. For late-afternoon deliveries, affidavits are typically delivered the following morning. For same-day service in time-sensitive matters where the affidavit must be in counsel's hands before a hearing or filing deadline, advise us of that requirement when ordering — we will prioritize affidavit preparation accordingly. Multi-entity affidavit packages for parallel same-day engagements are coordinated as a unified set and delivered together when all affidavits are complete, or individually as each service is confirmed if counsel needs progressive reporting.
FRCP 4(m) requires that service be completed within 90 days of filing the complaint in federal court. If service is not completed within 90 days, the court — upon motion or on its own initiative — may dismiss the action without prejudice, or may order that service be completed within a specified time. A dismissal without prejudice is not always a safe outcome: if the statute of limitations has run since the filing date, a re-filed complaint will be time-barred. Courts may extend the 4(m) deadline for good cause shown — documented efforts to serve, complexity of the defendant's corporate structure, or registered agent unavailability. International service through the Hague Convention is expressly excluded from the 4(m) deadline. For domestic corporate defendants, no such exclusion exists. The professional standard is to complete service well before day 90 — by day 60 at the latest — so that if a problem arises, there is time to resolve it within the window.
Yes, when a qualified officer or managing agent can be located and served at headquarters on the same day. FRCP 4(h)(1)(B) and most state service rules authorize service on an officer, director, or managing agent as an alternative to the registered agent. The challenge with same-day headquarters service is that the officer must be present and identifiable — this typically requires advance investigation to confirm who will be at headquarters that day and in what capacity. For major corporations with commercial registered agents, the registered agent route is faster and more reliable for same-day service: the commercial agent office is open at a known address, its intake protocol is predictable, and a receipt is issued at delivery. Headquarters officer service on the same day is achievable but requires more preparation and carries more uncertainty than registered agent delivery. Advise us of the approach when ordering so we can allocate the appropriate preparation time.
A same-day affidavit is legally defensible on the same grounds as any service affidavit: it must establish delivery to an authorized recipient at the correct address, with precise documentation of the time and circumstances. The elements that distinguish a defensible same-day affidavit: (1) GPS-verified coordinates confirming delivery at the registered agent's confirmed address — not a neighboring address or incorrect floor; (2) the exact time of delivery documented to the minute, establishing that delivery occurred during the registered agent's business hours; (3) the name and role of the accepting representative, confirming they are authorized to receive on the agent's behalf; (4) the commercial agent's written receipt, independently corroborating the delivery date, time, and entity; (5) the process server's credentials, including DCWP license number for New York City deliveries. A same-day affidavit produced under time pressure is not inherently weaker than an affidavit produced at leisure — it is as strong as its documentation. Undisputed Legal's GPS-verified format produces a fully documented affidavit regardless of the service tier.
Corporate service under deadline pressure requires a process service partner with the infrastructure to move fast and the discipline to get it right. Undisputed Legal serves business entities of every type — corporations, LLCs, limited partnerships, and general partnerships — in all 50 states and 120+ countries, with GPS-verified affidavits and same-day electronic delivery to counsel. Call (800) 774-6922 the moment a deadline is in play — not after the window has narrowed to hours.
Every day you wait is a day closer to a missed deadline. Statutes of limitations run. Discovery windows close. Corporate Process Service's legal team is already prepared — are you?
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Undisputed Legal Inc. maintains active membership and affiliations with the following professional organizations: National Association of Professional Process Servers (NAPPS), United States Process Servers Association (USPSA), National Association of Legal Support Professionals (NAOSP), Better Business Bureau (BBB) A+ Rating, New York State Unified Court System, DCWP Licensed Process Server (NYC), International Association of Professional Process Servers, National Notary Association, American Bar Association (ABA) - Allied Member, New York County Lawyers Association, Brooklyn Bar Association, Queens County Bar Association, Bronx County Bar Association, Staten Island Bar Association, Westchester County Bar Association, and Nassau County Bar Association.
Undisputed Legal is the authority in corporate process service. Explore our expertise:
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“Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of high intention, sincere effort, intelligent direction, and skillful execution; it represents the wise choice of many alternatives”– Foster, William A
How long does service take?
Routine service is typically completed within 3–7 business days. Rush service is generally attempted within 24–48 hours.
How many attempts are included?
Standard service includes up to three attempts at different times of day when required.
Will I receive proof of service?
Yes. Once service is completed, the signed affidavit will be uploaded to your secure portal.
What documents are required?
You must upload court-stamped documents or finalized copies ready for service.
Can I track the status of my case?
Yes. Log into your account at any time to view your case timeline and attempts.