The accident report is handwritten. We read all of it.
The amicable statement is the hardest document in claims — checkboxes, a sketch, two drivers’ handwriting. Mysa reads the whole thing, applies your convention, and hands the handler an apportionment ready to settle.
Extraction, plate checks and the convention ran on their own. What’s left is your call.
The box was ticked wrong. The payout wasn’t.
A misread checkbox or an ignored sketch quietly sets the wrong split — and the convention deadline runs while the form sits in a scanning queue.
The whole statement, wired to the split it sets.
The boxes, the sketch, the handwriting and the plates — read together, matched to your convention scenario.
Reads what OCR can’t
The checkboxes, the hand-drawn sketch and the handwriting — the part of the form every other tool skips.
Applies your convention
IDS, IRSA, CARD or SDC — the circumstances matched to the scenario and the apportionment it sets.
Chases the missing piece
The #1 handler time-sink — the second driver’s detail, the estimate — chased automatically until the file is whole.
Starts with your convention. Sharper every file.
The instinct for when the sketch overrules the boxes is years of handling. Mysa keeps it.
Your files. Your call.
Sovereign by design
Your cloud, on-prem, or your VPC. Statements never leave your environment.
Your team keeps the call
Mysa hands over the apportionment; the handler decides. A human in the loop, always.
Defensible by construction
Every split cites the boxes, the sketch and the scenario it rests on, logged for a dispute.
Common questions
Can Mysa read a handwritten accident statement?
Yes — the whole form, including the checkboxes, the hand-drawn sketch and the handwriting, which is the part most extraction tools skip. Document extraction
Which conventions does it support?
The direct-settlement conventions — IDS in Portugal, IRSA in France, CARD in Italy, SDC in Spain — applied as configurable scenarios, so the apportionment matches your rules. Convention matching
Does it settle on its own?
No. Mysa hands the handler the apportionment and its basis; the handler decides. A human in the loop on every call. Human in the loop