Install any of these into Claude once, and it becomes your personal case manager for that situation, drafting your letters and walking you through your whole case, every time.
Claude is a free AI assistant made by Anthropic. You can use it in any web browser, with nothing to install, or add the app to your phone. Either way is free to start.
Nothing to install. Go to claude.ai, make a free account, and start a chat. This is all most people need.
Search for "Claude by Anthropic" in the App Store or Google Play and tap install, or just open claude.ai in your phone's browser.
Anthropic's own channel has short, plain tutorials on what Claude is and how to use it.
A skill is a small file that teaches Claude a complete workflow. You can install it properly, or just borrow it for a single conversation on free Claude.
Free Claude does not install skills, but you do not need it to.
Open the matching guide instead, tap the plus on the black panel at the top, and copy the ready-made prompt into Claude at claude.ai. It will act as your case manager for that conversation.
Every guide has this built in.
Skills require "Code execution and file creation" to be enabled in Settings. They stay private to your account.
Each turns Claude into a methodical case manager: it works out your stage, gathers your details, drafts your letters and appeals, and keeps a running log of your case.
For bailiffs, enforcement agents, and debt enforcement letters, before crisis. Sets up your case and drafts arrangements and challenges.
Checks the support and discounts you may be missing, works out your stage, and steers you to an affordable arrangement.
Identifies your enforcement stage and drafts the right challenge or tribunal appeal for it.
Tells you what evidence to gather and drafts your challenge and independent tribunal appeal.
Keeps you from naming the driver, builds your evidence, and drafts your appeal to the operator and to POPLA or the IAS.
Works out whether it's an estimate or a real demand, protects your deadline, and drafts your appeal or Time to Pay.
Registers vulnerability first, then drafts letters and complaints to halt or reverse a forced installation.
Handles remote switches, disconnection, data and privacy, and faults, and claims the compensation you're owed.
Tests fairly whether the twelve-month rule protects you, then drafts your dispute and escalation.