Free Legal Research Sites
Free Legal Research Sites
Free Legal Research Sites
Aside from
running over to the law library at the local courthouse or law school, or hiring law students with
subscription access to Westlaw and Lexis, your options can sometimes be limiting. However, the
trend is moving away from traditional hard copy books towards electronic formats. Unless you have
your own law library, you’re probably looking for a low-to-no-cost solution for your research needs.
I’ve listed some free resources available for primary and secondary sources and also some places
that provide quick and easy background information about the law.
Primary:
1. Lexis Web: This is a great place to start here for everything legal. Use the filters to
2. Casemaker X: A great tool for attorneys practicing in Texas, or any other jurisdiction
for that matter (bar membership comes with free access). This is a free legal research
database that allows you to access statutes, regulations, and case law. Although Casemaker
information at no cost.
3. Fastcase: This is another database that offers free access for bar members. Similar
to Casemaker X, the site provides statutes, regulations, and case law. Plus, their mobile app
4. Google Scholar: Google also provides free case law searching, which can be filtered
by jurisdiction.
5. United States Code: The entire U.S.C. in a searchable and easy to use format.
6. State statutes: every state legislature provides free access to its Constitutions and
statutes. Each of these state codes are searchable and easy to use
1. Texas Statutes
2. California Statutes
3. Florida Statutes
Regulations.
Secondary:
1. Nolo: This site is informative and thorough, relaying a tremendous amount of legal
3. Justia: Another free legal encyclopedia that, in addition helpful law information, also
4. Local attorney websites: Check attorney websites for contact information, the types
of law services offered, and sometimes, free information pertaining to the law in their
jurisdiction. This free information can be very useful to attorneys who may need to familiarize
5. Find Law: Similar to Nolo, this is another easy to use source for background
information.
information available on their websites. For example, in Texas, if you need specific
a solo practitioner or small firm and legal research costs are a priority, bookmark these sites. Often
times, it’s better to familiarize yourself with a new area of law by doing some background reading.
Not only will this cut down on the amount of time it takes to find what you need, but when it comes
time to switch over to your paid subscription service you already have your search terms. With paid
subscription databases where each search and each click costs money, fewer searches means less
Comments
Crawford
Posted on 2019-05-21 16:13:40
For California, www.rulings.law offers free access to prior trial court tentative rulings. Reading prior
rulings can help attorneys draft better motions by seeing what caselaw and arguments persuade
their particular judge.
R.Friedman
Posted on 2018-11-16 12:44:15
There are 2 more free online legal research tools that you did not mention: www.Casebriefs.com
www.Lawpipe.com They are also pretty good free legal resources
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