Find legal help
LawRight increases access to housing, income and legal rights and improves the health and wellbeing of vulnerable people.
LawRight services
Do you have a complex or public interest matter, and can’t get help anywhere else? We connect people to a lawyer willing to help for free.
Eligibility
- the public interest of the matter;
- the level of hardship faced by the applicant;
- the potential outcome;
- the prospects of achieving a successful outcome;
- the resources required to progress the matter; and
- alternative options available to the applicant – including LawRight’s direct services.
Are you involved in a court or tribunal matter in Queensland? We help people who may be involved in court and tribunal proceedings in civil law (not family or criminal law).
Locations
Homelessness Law is Queensland’s free specialist legal service for people experiencing or at risk of homelessness.
Homelessness Law prevents and ends homelessness by resolving legal issues connected to a person’s housing, money, and experience of violence.
Multicultural Law provides free civil law help for newly arrived Queenslanders from multicultural backgrounds.
Implementing an outreach-based, trauma informed model, staff lawyers are fully embedded in frontline homelessness and health agencies in both Brisbane and Cairns.
Do you have a legal problem? Search our factsheets by area of law. We provide basic legal information and tell you if we can help, or who is best to help you.
When LawRight can’t help
If this is the first time you are seeking legal advice, and you are not in one of our Court & Tribunal Service jurisdictions or Community & Health Justice Partnership locations, you should first contact your nearest community legal centre for advice. You are welcome to later apply to LawRight but an appointment with a community legal centre lawyer is generally the quickest way to get advice and decide what to do next.
LawRight generally cannot assist with:
- matters outside of Queensland or Commonwealth law – consult Community Legal Centres Australia.
- people who can afford a lawyer – visit Queensland Law Society website to find a private law firm.
- Mental Health Review Tribunal matters – LawRight previously provided assistance and advocacy at hearings before the MHRT, but this service is closed for the foreseeable future. Contact QAI for assistance.
- Magistrates Court matters – contact your nearest community legal centre.
- family law – contact your nearest community legal centre.
- criminal law – contact Legal Aid Queensland.
- Native Title – contact a Native Title repesentative body.
- personal injury claims – find a ‘no win, no fee’ lawyer.
- building and construction disputes – contact a private lawyer.
- complex commercial disputes (except through the Courts & Tribunal Services, if we have capacity to do so).
- businesses, except where the individuals behind the business are unable to afford a lawyer.
Disclaimer
The information in this resource is for general information purposes only and should not be relied on as legal advice. If you need legal advice, please contact LawRight or another lawyer. LawRight can only give advice to people who are eligible for our services.