High Rise Financial (operating as High Class Financial Solutions) provides pre-settlement legal funding to individuals involved in pending personal injury lawsuits who need immediate cash while their cases are being litigated. The company positions itself as an alternative to traditional lawsuit loans, emphasizing that funding is contingent on case settlement rather than the borrower's creditworthiness or employment status. They serve clients who have been injured in accidents and are waiting for settlement proceeds, targeting those facing financial hardship during the litigation process.
The company offers advance funding ranging from $500 to $100,000 based on case merit rather than credit score. Their core service involves contacting the applicant's attorney, evaluating case strength, and if approved, providing cash within 24 hours. The funding is non-recourse—if the lawsuit is lost, the applicant owes nothing. Repayment with an agreed-upon interest rate occurs only when the settlement is finalized. They advertise no credit checks, no financial review, no job requirement, and no monthly payments during the waiting period.
What distinguishes High Rise is their explicit non-recourse structure and rapid funding timeline (24-48 hours to approval, same-day cash delivery possible). They emphasize transparency and claim to handle all paperwork coordination with attorneys. Customer testimonials highlight fast funding, friendly service, and one-day cash deposits. The company operates with bilingual support (Spanish language services available) and targets law firms as referral partners through a dedicated landing page.
However, this product carries important caveats: it is a contingent loan with interest fees that reduce net settlement proceeds, appeals to borrowers in financially vulnerable positions, and requires attorney coordination. While non-recourse structure eliminates default risk, the cost of capital is embedded in settlement recovery, meaning clients receive less from their final settlement. The absence of credit requirements reflects underwriting based on case strength rather than creditworthiness, making this suitable primarily for pending lawsuit plaintiffs with solid cases, not general personal finance borrowers.