Buying a home yourself? Torri reviews your contract in plain English — torri.com.au

Ask the contract anything

Put a question to the contract in plain English and get an answer grounded in the document — then reword any line before it reaches your client.

The problem with hunting through the contract

Some of the review is not reading — it is searching. Where is the settlement date set? Does this clause require notice, and how much? Is that document actually attached, or just referenced? Each question means going back into the contract, finding the right page, and reading around it. Individually small; across a day of contracts, a real drain.

And when you have the answer, you still have to write it up in language fit for a client — which is its own small task, repeated on every point.

How the assistant works

  • 1

    Ask in plain English

    Put a question to the contract the way you would ask a colleague — about a date, a clause, an obligation, a document — and get an answer grounded in the contract you uploaded.

  • 2

    Stay anchored to the document

    Answers come from the contract in front of it, not from general knowledge, so what you get back reflects this matter rather than a guess.

  • 3

    Reword for the report

    Any part of the review can be reworded inline, so the language that reaches your client is in your voice before it ever leaves your desk.

Built for NSW and Victorian conveyancing

The assistant works over a contract Torri has already read in its own jurisdiction — a NSW contract for sale of land with its certificates, title and dealings, or a Victorian contract of sale with its Section 32 compliance check, owners corporation certificate and disclosures. So the questions it answers best are the ones a conveyancer actually asks of that contract, grounded in the document rather than in the general internet.

Where it fits your review

This is the part of the work that is lookup rather than judgement — and that is exactly what it takes off your plate. The assistant surfaces and explains what the contract says; the legal call, and the report you sign, remain yours. It is faster than flicking back through the pages, and it never changes a word of the contract — only helps you read it.

Questions, answered

What can I ask the assistant?

Anything you would otherwise hunt for in the contract — where a date is set, what a clause requires, whether a document is attached. Answers are grounded in the contract you uploaded.

Can I edit the wording it produces?

Yes. You can reword any part of the review inline, so the language that reaches your client is yours.

Is the assistant making the legal call?

No. It surfaces and explains what the contract says. The advice, and the report you sign, remain yours.

See it on your next contract.

Three reviews on us. No credit card. No sales call.