Working with us

We prioritise emerging and unfunded groups working for social and racial justice, offering legal support at low or no cost wherever possible.

Making legal support accessible

Thanks to grant funding, we provide advice, training, and workshops to communities that face barriers to legal help.

We use a flexible, transparent sliding scale – welcoming financial contributions where possible – so access to legal support is never dependent solely on ability to pay.

Pricing & contributions

We prioritise transparency and fairness, openly discussing any contributions before work begins. Our approach ensures that access to legal expertise is based on need and community impact, not organisational budgets, so that all those driving social change can get the support they need.

First hour free

Always free for community organisations: an initial call to discuss your needs and provide advice.

Unfunded organisations

We are grant-funded to provide legal support at low or no cost. Most emerging or unfunded groups can access advice and guidance without paying, so financial barriers do not block access to our services.

Funded organisations

We ask groups that have received some funding to contribute to cover our time based on their resources, size, and the complexity of work. Contributions are agreed with you transparently and fairly, typically ranging from £90–£130 per hour, depending on circumstances.

Workshops

Community workshops for organisers or community members: Typically range from £350–£650.

Workshops for funders, established or funded organisations, or service providers: Typically £1,350–£2,600 depending on complexity and time spent.
We aim to keep costs flexible, exploring alternative contributions or mutual learning where relevant.

Scope & limitations

We cannot support urgent, time-sensitive, contentious, or litigious matters due to capacity, funding, and regulatory constraints. 

We do not act on reserved legal matters, including: work involving courts or tribunals, financial transactions or holding client money. 

We don’t have the expertise within our collective to advise on employment law, property law, immigration law, public law or criminal law related matters. Wherever possible, we signpost or collaborate with others to ensure communities can access the legal support they need.