Free legal guidance, always.

The law was written
for people who can
afford lawyers.

AccessLex changes that. An AI agent that monitors your legal situation, alerts you to deadlines, explains your rights in plain language, and helps you draft court filings. For free. For everyone who needs it.

AccessLex is launching soon.
71%
of low-income civil legal problems receive inadequate or no help
$300+
average hourly rate for a civil attorney in the US
10,000+
eviction cases filed every week in the US — most tenants unrepresented
How it works

Your legal situation, monitored around the clock.

01

Tell us your situation

Describe what you're facing — eviction, debt collection, a court date, a dispute. You don't need legal terminology.

02

Your agent goes to work

AccessLex monitors your legal landscape, tracks deadlines, researches your rights, and prepares your filings — autonomously.

03

You walk in prepared

Clear explanations of what each document means, what your options are, and exactly what to say in court.

Built different

Not a chatbot.
An employee who works nights.

Deadline monitoring

Miss one court deadline and lose your case. AccessLex tracks every filing window so you never miss one.

Plain-language explanations

No legalese. No assumptions. Just clear, direct explanations of what the law says and what it means for your case.

Smart form drafting

Answer questions in plain English. AccessLex turns your answers into properly formatted court filings.

Proactive alerts

No more wondering what comes next. AccessLex tells you what to do, when to do it, and why it matters.

"I watched people lose their housing because they couldn't navigate forms that cost them nothing and everything at the same time."

— The reason we built AccessLex

Justice should not be a luxury. Not in a country where the law is supposed to protect everyone equally. AccessLex exists so that the person who can't afford a lawyer has the same information, the same deadlines met, and the same chance at a fair outcome as the person who can.

That's not charity. That's what the law promised.