They buried the storage fee math in paragraph 12
Your antique mall contract calculates fees on cubic feet, not square feet. That's why your bill keeps growing.
Your storage fee isn't what you think it is
You signed the vendor agreement at 11pm because the mall manager said it's 'standard.' Now you get a bill every month based on a formula you can't find.
- Fee calculated on 'occupied cubic footage'—but the contract never defines how they measure it
- A 'storage adjustment factor' gets added every quarter with no explanation
- You're charged for 'vertical space utilization' above 8 feet, but your booth has 10-foot ceilings
We translate the legalese into a one-page breakdown
Upload your antique mall contract. We find the exact fee calculation clauses, explain them in plain English, and show you where you're overpaying.
- See the precise formula they use to multiply your space by 1.7x
- Get a comparison to what 5 other malls in your state charge
- Learn the exact language to request a cap on the 'adjustment factor'
How it works
From confused to confident in under 3 minutes
Upload your vendor agreement PDF
Just the pages with the fee and space definitions. No personal info needed.
We flag the hidden calculation clauses
Our AI finds every reference to 'storage,' 'cubic,' 'adjustment,' and 'measurement.'
You get a plain English summary
See exactly how they calculate your fee, what's negotiable, and what to ask for.
Numbers from the trenches
From people who got burned
"I thought my storage fee was a flat rate. Nope. They calculate by cubic feet behind the scenes. Legal Shell AI showed me the exact formula—now I'm not getting screwed."
"My contract said 'storage space as determined by management.' That's a blank check. The app found that clause and gave me the language to get it capped. Saved me $200/month."
Stop guessing what your storage fee actually is
Upload your antique mall vendor contract now. See the hidden calculation in 2 minutes.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a licensed attorney for legal matters.