Treat it as a fast first pass, not the final word. The detection is based on patterns, so it can miss an unusual date format or flag a number that is not what you think it is. Everything it finds is for you to verify against the actual contract before you rely on it.
How it works
- Add the contract PDF you want to review.
- The tool reads the text and looks for names, dates, monetary amounts, and similar key details.
- It lists what it found, grouped so you can scan the parties, dates, and figures quickly.
- Check each detected item against the contract itself, since the detection is a best guess.
- Use the confirmed details to fill a schedule, a receipt, or your own records.
Your privacy
The contract is scanned entirely in your browser — the file and the details found in it never leave your device.
Nothing is uploaded to a FinSafe server, so the names and amounts in your agreement stay private.
Your documents are never used to train AI models.
Common use cases
- Pull the parties, amount, and due date out of a loan agreement for a quick review.
- Collect the figures you need to build a repayment schedule.
- Double-check that the names and amounts in a contract match what you agreed.
- Gather the key details before writing a payment receipt or reminder.
- Skim the important terms of an agreement someone sent you before reading it in full.
- Spot-check a long contract for the dates and amounts that matter most.
Limitations
- Detection is heuristic — it recognises common patterns and can miss or misread unusual formats, so every result needs your check.
- Only selectable text can be scanned; scanned or photographed contracts need OCR first, which this tool does not do.
- It identifies where details appear but does not judge whether the terms are complete, fair, or lawful.
- Ambiguous figures, like a reference number that looks like an amount, may be picked up by mistake.
Frequently asked questions
How accurate is the detection?
It is a helpful first pass, not a guarantee. The tool recognises common patterns for names, dates, and amounts, but unusual wording or formatting can trip it up. Always check each item against the contract before you rely on it.
What details does it look for?
Mainly the parties' names, dates, and monetary amounts — the terms people most often need to review in a loan or repayment agreement. It highlights where they appear so you can confirm them quickly.
Can it read a scanned agreement?
No. It only reads selectable text, so a scan or photo has to be run through OCR first, which this tool does not yet offer. Use a PDF that was created digitally for now.
Why did it miss or misread a value?
Detection relies on patterns, so an unusual date style or an amount written in words can slip past, and a reference number might be mistaken for a figure. That is exactly why the results are for you to verify.
Are the extracted details sent anywhere?
No. The whole scan runs in your browser on your own device. Neither the contract nor the details it contains are uploaded to a server.
Can I trust these details for a payment schedule?
Use them as a starting point and confirm each one against the contract first. Once verified, they are a convenient way to fill a schedule or receipt without retyping everything.