Something happened. Now what?
You don't need to read 40 pages of case law before you make a phone call. Pick the situation closest to yours, get the short version, and find out whether you need a lawyer — and which kind.
Pick your situation
Each guide takes about 4 minutes to read and tells you the three things most people miss.
After a car accident
What to do in the first 48 hours, when to call a lawyer, how to know if you have a real claim.
Class actionOpen class action settlements
Active settlements you may already qualify for. Updated monthly. Most just need name + email.
EmploymentYou think you were wrongfully fired
How to tell if it was actually illegal vs. just unfair. Free intake forms by state.
Landlord-tenantYou got (or you need to send) an eviction notice
State-by-state notice templates, tenant rights, when a property manager is cheaper than a lawyer.
Family lawPrenup, name change, marriage forms
Templates by state, plain-English explanations, what a lawyer should look over before you sign.
Most people Google these in the wrong order
The most common pattern we see: people search "is this lawyer good?" before they've answered "do I actually need a lawyer?" Working the order in reverse is the simplest improvement.
The class action list we wish existed when we started this
There are usually 50-80 active class action settlements at any given time. Most of them have a deadline. Most of them pay $25-$500 for a name and email. And almost none of them advertise to the people who actually qualify.
Once a month, we email you the current list, organized by category and deadline. That's the whole product. No upsell, no nonsense.
Get the monthly Active Class Actions list
One email per month. The current open class action settlements you may qualify for, plus deadlines you don't want to miss. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
Why we exist
Most legal websites are written by law firms trying to make you their client, or by content farms trying to rank for ad clicks. Both have a reason to make things sound scarier and more complicated than they are.
We're the third option: people who answer the actual question first, admit when the answer is "just call a lawyer," and tell you which lawyer to call only when you'd want to know.