A rep's pitch and the contract you sign are two different documents. This guide gives you a structured way to close the gap between what you were told verbally and what you are actually agreeing to — before the ink is dry.
📊 Coming from the Quote Decoder?
A low-risk result means the written text you pasted didn't contain major red flags in the categories the decoder checks. It does not mean:
A low-risk quote is not the same as a fully verified deal. This guide covers what to check next.
The three documents every buyer is working from — and why each can say something different:
① What the rep said
Verbal: no contract, rate locked in, equipment is yours, we'll waive the ETF if you move.
Not legally binding unless in writing.
② What the quote shows
Written summary: monthly rate, equipment list, term length — often a one-pager or proposal PDF. What the Quote Decoder analyzes.
Marketing material, not the full agreement.
③ What the contract says
Full service agreement: ETF formula, auto-renewal clause, rate escalation ceiling, financing terms. The document that governs your actual obligations.
This is what you are signing.
The validation job: close all three gaps. Confirm that every verbal promise appears in the contract. Confirm the contract matches what the quote implies. If any gap exists — ask before signing.
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Nearly a decade in home security · Thousands of installations overseen · Built to cut through sales pressure
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The Quote Decoder analyzes the written text you paste. It flags risk signals in what a company puts in writing. It cannot check what it was never given. Specifically, a low-risk result does not verify:
Verbal promises not captured in the pasted text
If the rep made a verbal promise that doesn't appear in the quote you pasted, the decoder has no way to evaluate it. It only sees what you gave it.
Contract clauses not included in the quote summary
A quote summary is a marketing document. The ETF formula, auto-renewal window, rate escalation ceiling, and financing terms typically appear only in the full service agreement — not the one-pager you received.
Whether the rep is a dealer or direct brand employee
Dealer-originated contracts can differ materially from brand-published defaults. A low-risk score on dealer-provided text doesn't confirm the contract matches brand terms you read online.
The auto-renewal window
Quote summaries rarely include the auto-renewal notice period. The window (typically 30–60 days before contract end) appears in the service agreement. Missing it means the contract renews automatically.
The rate escalation ceiling
The maximum annual rate increase is almost never in a quote summary. It appears in the service agreement under 'Rate Increase' or 'Price Adjustment.' A 5% annual escalation on a $49.99 starting rate adds approximately $91 over 36 months.
Whether equipment financing is a separate obligation
For Vivint and similar providers, equipment may be financed through a separate 42–60-month loan. If the quote text doesn't mention this loan, the decoder can't flag it. 'No monitoring contract' and 'no financial obligation' are not the same thing.
These are the 7 claims that appear most consistently in verbal pitches and most rarely appear as explicit written clauses in the service agreement. Know them before you open the contract.
"We'll waive the ETF if you move within the service area."
Why it's often left verbal-only: Almost never appears in writing. ETF waivers for relocation are often rep-level promises that the brand's cancellation department does not honor. The standard ETF clause typically applies regardless of why you cancel.
What to do: Ask for a written addendum or email confirming the specific ETF waiver condition before signing.
"This rate won't go up as long as you're a customer."
Why it's often left verbal-only: Rate escalation clauses are standard in professionally installed contracts. A rep's verbal rate-lock promise is almost never matched by explicit rate-cap language in the service agreement.
What to do: Find the 'Rate Increase' or 'Price Adjustment' clause. If it allows any annual increase, the rate is not fully locked.
"You're not financing anything — the equipment is included."
Why it's often left verbal-only: For Vivint especially, equipment is often financed through a separate 42–60-month loan (Citizens Pay or equivalent) that is entirely separate from monitoring. Reps presenting this as 'included' obscure a real financial obligation.
What to do: Ask directly: 'Is there a separate equipment financing agreement? What is the total payoff amount?' Look for any document that isn't the monitoring service agreement.
"Cancel anytime — no penalty."
Why it's often left verbal-only: 'Cancel anytime' is technically true but almost always requires a written notice period (typically 30 days) and includes billing through the end of the current period. Combined with a contract term, 'anytime' still means 'with notice and possible ETF.'
What to do: Find the cancellation clause. Note the required notice period, the method required (written, certified mail, portal), and any fee for the notice period.
"The equipment is yours after the contract."
Why it's often left verbal-only: True for most professionally installed systems after the service term ends — but not universal, and not always immediate. Some contracts include clauses about proprietary hardware reactivation fees or removal charges.
What to do: Look for the 'Equipment Ownership' or 'Hardware' section. Confirm whether ownership transfers automatically at contract end or requires any action.
"The auto-renewal just keeps your same terms going."
Why it's often left verbal-only: Auto-renewal preserves the monitoring relationship but does not reset the contract clock to a new term — it simply continues billing until you cancel with proper notice. Missing the notice window means paying through another billing cycle.
What to do: Find the auto-renewal clause. Note the notice window (typically 30–60 days before contract end) and the required cancellation method.
"Everything the technician installs is covered under warranty."
Why it's often left verbal-only: Warranty terms vary significantly — what's covered, for how long, whether replacement or repair is the remedy, and whether the warranty transfers if you sell your home.
What to do: Find the warranty or service guarantee section. Note the coverage period, what voids it, and whether it covers third-party equipment.
You now have documents in hand. Use this table to match each verbal claim to the specific contract section that confirms or contradicts it.
| If the rep said this… | Find this clause in the service agreement | What a strong clause looks like |
|---|---|---|
| "No contract — cancel anytime" | Cancellation / Term section | Month-to-month with no minimum term and no ETF. Note: still check for required notice period. |
| "Your rate is locked in" | Rate Increase / Price Adjustment section | Explicit statement that the monitoring fee cannot increase during the original contract term. |
| "Equipment is free / included" | Equipment / Hardware section + any financing addendum | No separate financing agreement. Equipment cost embedded in monthly fee with no additional payoff obligation. |
| "We'll waive the ETF if you move" | Early Termination Fee section + any written addendum | Specific written language stating ETF is waived in the event of relocation to a non-service area. Verbal promise alone is unenforceable. |
| "Cancel anytime without penalty" | Early Termination / Cancellation section | Zero dollar ETF with no minimum term. Separate from any notice period requirement. |
| "Equipment is yours after the contract" | Equipment Ownership / Hardware section | Explicit statement that equipment ownership transfers to buyer at end of service term with no additional action required. |
| "This price includes everything" | Fees / Additional Charges section | No activation fee, permit fee, cellular module fee, or installation charge listed separately. |
| "No financing — it's one payment" | Any document titled 'Financing Agreement,' 'Equipment Loan,' or 'SmartPay' | Only one agreement for monitoring. If a second agreement exists, it is a separate financial obligation regardless of how it was described verbally. |
If you can't find the corresponding clause — or find language that contradicts what the rep said — go to step 5 of the validation process below.
Follow this sequence before signing anything. It takes 20–30 minutes and protects against the most common buyer regrets.
List every verbal claim before opening the contract.
Write down everything the rep told you — rate lock, ETF waiver, equipment ownership, cancel anytime, monitoring quality, installation cost. Do this before reading the contract so you are comparing against memory, not what the contract primes you to remember.
Request the full service agreement before the installation appointment.
Not the quote summary. Not the proposal PDF. The actual service agreement — the document you will sign. Any legitimate provider sends this on request. If the rep says it is only available at installation, that is a walk-away trigger.
For each verbal claim, search the contract for the corresponding clause.
Use the 'If the rep said this' table above. Know which section to look for. If you cannot find the corresponding clause, flag it — absence of a clause is not the same as the claim being true.
Flag every claim that is not confirmed in writing.
A verbal promise with no written counterpart is an unenforceable promise. Make a specific list: claim, clause searched, found or not found.
Ask the rep to show you where each flagged claim appears in the contract.
Be direct: 'You told me the ETF is waived if I move — can you show me where that appears in the contract?' If they can point to it, you have confirmation. If they cannot, see step 6.
For claims still not in writing: request a written addendum or pause the deal.
A written addendum you both sign is the correct resolution. If the rep says they cannot provide one, or that it is 'not how they do things,' assume the verbal claim does not apply. Do not sign on the promise that they will 'take care of it.' See 'When to pause, escalate, or walk away' below.
Discrepancies between verbal pitch and written terms are common. If you find one before signing, here is the correct sequence:
These are specific situations where stopping before signing is the correct move — not an overreaction.
Rep won't provide the full service agreement before signing.
You have an absolute right to read what you are agreeing to. 'Available at installation' or 'sent after activation' are not acceptable answers. Stop the process.
A verbal promise appears nowhere in the contract after you've specifically asked.
If the rep cannot point to the clause and cannot provide a written addendum, the promise is not part of your agreement. Do not proceed on a verbal assurance.
Rep says 'that's standard,' 'trust me,' or 'don't worry about that.'
These are deflections, not answers. Standard terms appear in the contract. If it's truly standard, it should take ten seconds to point to it.
Equipment financing is described as 'part of monitoring' without clarification.
If there is a separate financing agreement in your paperwork — even described as 'included' — read the full payoff schedule. The loan obligation continues independently of monitoring.
Pressure to sign before the end of a promotion or before you can review the contract.
The FTC Cooling-Off Rule gives you 3 business days to cancel in-home sales — but the cleanest position is not signing under pressure in the first place. Time pressure in sales is a tactic, not a genuine constraint.
The rep is a dealer but is quoting brand-level terms that differ from the contract.
Dealer contracts can differ from brand defaults. If what the rep is describing matches the brand's published terms but differs from the contract in your hand, the contract governs — not the brand's website.
The FTC Cooling-Off Rule gives you 3 business days to cancel a contract signed in your home or at a location other than the seller's permanent place of business. If you signed under pressure, you can use this window. But the cleanest position is not signing until the contract matches what you were told.
Once you've validated the rep's claims, the next step is reading the full service agreement clause by clause. If you haven't modeled the financial exposure yet, the ETF Calculator does that in under two minutes.
Read the contract clause by clause
Once you have the full service agreement, this guide covers the 8 clauses that determine your actual financial exposure — ETF formula, auto-renewal, rate escalation, and the financing distinction.
Contract reading guide →Model what being wrong would cost
If a rate-lock claim turns out to be wrong, or the ETF is larger than described, this calculator shows your exact exit cost at any month of the contract. Free and runs in your browser.
ETF Calculator →Haven't run the Quote Decoder yet?
Paste any written text from the rep — a quote summary, proposal PDF, or contract excerpt — and the decoder will flag risk signals across 7 categories in seconds. Free, browser-based.
Open Quote Decoder →Related reading: Before you sign — the full stage-by-stage buyer system (where validating a rep's claim fits in the pre-sign workflow) · How to read a home security contract — clause-by-clause guide to the 8 terms that matter · How to interpret Quote Decoder results — what each risk category means and what to do · Pre-sign checklist — 12 questions to ask before you have anything in writing (earlier step) · Home security quote red flags — 7 warning signs to catch in written materials · ADT contract length — what the 36-month term means in dollar terms · Vivint financing explained — why 'no monitoring contract' doesn't mean no obligation · How to compare a home security quote — side-by-side evaluation framework · Quote Decoder tool — paste any written quote text and surface risk flags
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