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Free Legal Aid in India — Complete Guide | PRAN Foundation
PRAN Foundation · Legal Aid Initiative 2026

Free Legal Aid in India:
Every Avenue Available to You

From NALSA and Lok Adalat to Nyaya Bandhu and Consumer Forums — a complete, practical guide to every official channel for free legal help in India.

Adv. Amarjeet Singh Panghal PRAN Foundation March 2026

Every year, millions of Indians face legal problems — illegal eviction, unpaid wages, consumer fraud, medical negligence, domestic violence — but never see the inside of a court or a lawyer's chamber. Not because they lack a valid case. But because they believe justice is expensive, complicated, and meant for someone else.

They are wrong. And the Constitution, Parliament, and the Government of India's own programmes all agree with them. This guide maps every official avenue through which any Indian citizen can access free legal services.

"Equal justice and free legal aid are not charity extended to the poor. They are a fundamental obligation of the State, guaranteed under Article 39A of the Constitution of India." — Constitution of India · Article 39A, Directive Principles of State Policy

The right to free legal aid flows from three constitutional provisions: Article 39A (equal justice and free legal aid), Article 14 (equality before law), and Article 21 (right to life and liberty — which courts have interpreted to include right to legal representation). Parliament enacted the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 to deliver on this promise. It came into force on 9 November 1995 and created a four-tier structure covering every district and taluk in India.

1987Legal Services Authorities Act
36+State Legal Services Authorities
700+District LSAs across India
2.84 CrCases settled in a single day — March 2026

Who Is Entitled to Free Legal Aid?

Under Section 12 of the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987, the following are entitled as of right to free legal services — the statute uses the word "shall", meaning there is no discretion to refuse:

  • Women and children — any woman or child, regardless of income
  • Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes — any member, regardless of income
  • Victims of mass disaster, violence, flood, drought, earthquake, or industrial accident
  • Persons with disabilities — physical or mental, under applicable disability law
  • Persons in custody — under-trial prisoners, persons in protective or preventive detention
  • Victims of trafficking and begar (forced labour)
  • Persons with mental illness — as defined under applicable mental health legislation
  • Persons below income threshold — below ₹1,25,000/year for SC matters; ₹1,00,000/year for HC matters; States may set higher limits for district courts

Important: Even outside these categories, Lok Adalat and Consumer Commissions are open to all citizens. And all costs — process fees, drafting, typing, clerkage, and panel lawyer fees — are fully borne by the legal services institutions.

Avenue 1 — The NALSA / SLSA / DLSA Network

NALSA (National Legal Services Authority) is the apex body, headquartered at the Supreme Court complex, New Delhi. The Chief Justice of India is Patron-in-Chief. Below NALSA, the structure operates at four levels:

AuthorityHeaded ByHandles Matters BeforeHow to Reach
NALSACJI (Patron) / SC Judge (Chairman)Supreme Courtnalsa.gov.in | ☎ 15100
SLSA (Each State)Chief Justice of High CourtHigh CourtState capital, HC complex
HSLSA (Haryana)CJ, Punjab & Haryana HCP&H High Court, Haryana courtshslsa.gov.in | Chandigarh
DSLSA (Delhi)CJ, Delhi High CourtDelhi High Courtdslsa.org | Rouse Avenue Courts
DLSA (District)District & Sessions JudgeDistrict & subordinate courtsEvery District Court complex
DLSA Patiala HouseDistrict JudgePatiala House Court mattersPatiala House Court Complex, New Delhi
TLSC (Taluk)Senior Civil JudgeTaluk / sub-divisional courtsTaluk court complex

What NALSA / DLSA Covers

  • 1
    Legal advice and consultation on your rights and remedies
  • 2
    Drafting of legal documents — applications, petitions, complaints, legal notices
  • 3
    Full court representation by a panel advocate — at zero cost
  • 4
    Payment of all court fees, process fees, and incidental expenses by the institution
  • 5
    Facilitation of government entitlements — ration cards, pensions, housing scheme benefits
  • 6
    Legal awareness camps in villages, slums, and labour colonies
  • 7
    Assistance to illiterate persons through Para Legal Volunteers who fill forms on their behalf

How to Apply at a DLSA

1
Visit the DLSA at your District Court complex

Bring ID proof, income documents (if using income threshold), and all papers related to your matter

2
Fill the legal aid application form

If illiterate, a Para Legal Volunteer can fill it for you. Affix signature or thumb impression.

3
Eligibility check

The DLSA verifies your category under Section 12 — a simple administrative step, not adversarial

4
Panel advocate assigned

A trained panel advocate handles all proceedings at no cost. All fees are paid by the institution.

Avenue 2 — Lok Adalat (People's Court)

⚖️

Lok Adalat — People's Court

No Court Fees · Final & Binding Award · Open to All Citizens

Lok Adalat resolves disputes through conciliation — without the adversarial process of regular courts. Its awards carry the same force as a civil court decree, are final, and cannot be appealed. Unlike DLSA (which requires income/category eligibility), Lok Adalat is open to all citizens regardless of income or category.

Three benefits no other forum combines: No court fees — and fees already paid are refunded if a pending case settles; the award is immediately enforceable like a court decree; and the process is informal — parties can interact directly with the presiding officer.

Scale in 2026: The first National Lok Adalat of 2026, held on 14 March 2026, resolved 2.84 crore cases in a single day with settlements worth ₹10,920 crore — the largest single-day dispute resolution exercise in Indian legal history.

Four Types of Lok Adalat

  • 1
    Regular Lok Adalats — held at regular intervals by DLSAs and TLSCs at district and taluk levels. Both pending court cases and pre-litigation disputes can be brought.
  • 2
    National Lok Adalats — organised by NALSA simultaneously across all courts from Supreme Court to Taluk courts on a single day, four times a year (March, May, September, December — 2nd Saturday).
  • 3
    Permanent Lok Adalats (PLAs) — established in most districts for public utility disputes (transport, postal, insurance, water supply, hospitals). Handle pre-litigation matters and can impose an award if parties cannot settle.
  • 4
    Mobile Lok Adalats — travel from location to location, reaching remote villages where people cannot travel to district headquarters.

What Matters Can Lok Adalat Handle?

Matter TypeExamples
Motor Accident ClaimsInsurance compensation for road accidents, disability claims
Cheque BounceSection 138 NI Act matters
Bank RecoveryLoan defaults, credit card dues, NPA settlements
Labour DisputesWage arrears, service benefits, PF/ESI disputes
Land & PropertyPartition disputes, title, boundary, possession
MatrimonialMaintenance, alimony (not divorce decree itself)
Utility DisputesElectricity, water, telecom complaints
Traffic ChallansPending challans and compoundable traffic fines
Compoundable CriminalMinor offences where legal compromise is permitted

Avenue 3 — Nyaya Bandhu (DoJ Pro Bono Portal)

📱

Nyaya Bandhu — Pro Bono Legal Services

Department of Justice · DISHA Scheme · 22 Languages · App + Portal

Nyaya Bandhu is a Government of India digital platform launched in April 2017 under the DoJ's DISHA scheme (Designing Innovative Solutions for Holistic Access to Justice). It connects eligible citizens with advocate volunteers who provide pro bono legal services — completely free of professional charges.

As of mid-2025: 9,261 advocates registered; pro bono panels at 23 High Courts; 109 law college Pro Bono Clubs; approximately 14,888 women beneficiaries registered. The portal is in all 22 scheduled languages and also accessible via the UMANG app.

The assigned advocate cannot charge any professional fees. You may only be asked to cover actual out-of-pocket expenses like photocopying and postage charges.

How to Register on Nyaya Bandhu (Step by Step)

1
Download the Nyaya Bandhu App

Available on Google Play Store, Apple App Store, or via the UMANG app. Also at probono-doj.in

2
Register Basic Profile

Name, contact, location, and your eligibility category under Section 12 of the Legal Services Authorities Act

3
Add Your Case

Click 'Add Case' — enter matter type (civil/criminal), the court where it is filed or will be filed, and a description

4
Advocate Matched & Assigned

System matches you based on (a) area of practice and (b) court of practice. You are notified once assigned.

5
Free Legal Service Begins

The advocate handles your matter pro bono. PRAN Foundation can assist you through registration and follow-up.

Avenue 4 — Consumer Commissions

Consumer disputes have their own dedicated quasi-judicial forum under the Consumer Protection Act, 2019. No lawyer is compulsory — a consumer can appear in person. There are three tiers:

🏛️

District Consumer Commission

Claims up to ₹50 Lakhs

Available in every district. No court fee for claims up to ₹5 lakhs. Nominal sliding fee for ₹5L–₹50L. Covers: defective products, service deficiency, unfair trade practices, misleading ads, overcharging.

Every District HQIn person or postal complaint
🏢

State Consumer Commission

Claims ₹50L to ₹2 Crore

At state capital. Appeals from District Commission lie here. Haryana: SCDRC Panchkula. Delhi: Mata Sundri Road, New Delhi. Also handles appeals from DCDRC.

State CapitalAppeals from DCDRC
🇮🇳

NCDRC (National Commission)

Claims above ₹2 Crore

Apex consumer forum at Janpath, New Delhi. Handles high-value original cases and appeals from State Commissions. Website: ncdrc.nic.in

ncdrc.nic.inJanpath, New Delhi
💻

e-Jagriti (Online Filing)

File From Home · Free

Government's official online consumer complaint portal (formerly e-Daakhil, migrated January 2025). File complaints, track status, upload documents — no physical visit needed. Available for DCDRC, SCDRC, and NCDRC across all states.

e-jagriti.gov.in☎ 1800-11-4000

Avenue 5 — Para Legal Volunteers (PLVs)

Para Legal Volunteers are community-level workers trained and deployed by NALSA and SLSAs as a bridge between the legal system and ordinary people — especially in rural areas, slums, and tribal communities. They are drawn from retired teachers, retired government servants, NGO workers, anganwadi workers, self-help groups, and panchayat members.

A PLV in your village can: explain your legal rights in plain language; fill your legal aid application form if you are illiterate; guide you to the nearest DLSA or TLSC; help you apply for government entitlements (ration card, pension, housing); and assist with Nyaya Bandhu app registration.

How to find a PLV: Contact your nearest DLSA or TLSC office and ask for the Para Legal Volunteer assigned to your panchayat or block. NALSA is progressively mapping PLVs digitally. PRAN Foundation can also connect you with the right PLV or DLSA for your area.

Avenue 6 — Law College Legal Aid Cells

Under Bar Council of India rules and NALSA's accreditation scheme, law colleges across India are required to maintain Legal Aid Cells providing free advice, document drafting, and RTI support — supervised by faculty advocates. Pro Bono Clubs at 109 law colleges are also formally linked to Nyaya Bandhu.

Key institutions relevant to PRAN's geography: Campus Law Centre, Delhi University; Maharishi Dayanand University Law Dept., Rohtak; Kurukshetra University; and National Law University Delhi. Each operates a legal aid cell accessible to the public on working days.

Key Helplines & Quick Reference

15100NALSA HelplineFree legal aid referral
Mon–Fri 9:30am–6pm
14454Nyaya BandhuDoJ pro bono portal
Via Common Service Centres
1800-11-4000Consumer HelplineNational Consumer Helpline
DOCA, Govt of India
181Women HelplineAll India Women Helpline
24×7 service
AvenueOpen ToCostBest ForContact / Portal
NALSA / DLSASection 12 eligibleFully FreeCourt representation, complex matters15100 / District Court
Lok AdalatAll citizensFully FreeQuick settlement, pre-litigationDLSA / nalsa.gov.in
Nyaya BandhuSection 12 eligibleFree (incidentals only)Digital access, advocate matchingprobono-doj.in / 14454
Consumer CommissionAny consumerFree up to ₹5LProduct/service/housing disputese-jagriti.gov.in
Para Legal VolunteersAll, esp. rural/illiterateFully FreeGuidance, form filling, referralNearest DLSA / TLSC
Law College Aid CellsAll citizensFully FreeAdvice, RTI, document draftingNearest law college
PRAN FoundationAll citizensFully FreeIntake, triage, referral, follow-up+91-89207 98501

Why Legal Aid Still Doesn't Reach Most People

Despite this robust framework, the majority of eligible persons in India never access the aid they are entitled to. The barriers are both structural and attitudinal:

🚫 Awareness Gap

Most Indians — including educated, urban citizens — are unaware that free legal aid exists, let alone that they may be entitled to it by law.

🚫 Distance Barrier

DLSA offices sit at district headquarters. For rural populations, the cost of travel and time away from work is itself a prohibitive barrier.

🚫 Language Barrier

Legal communication is often in English or formal Hindi, inaccessible to speakers of regional languages and dialects.

🚫 Fear & Stigma

Many people — particularly women, marginalised communities, migrant workers — fear retaliation or social stigma from approaching legal authorities.

🚫 Complexity

Legal processes involve forms, documents, and procedural knowledge that first-timers lack — making the system feel impossibly complex from outside.

🚫 Mistrust

A widespread — not entirely unfounded — belief that free services are slow, ineffective, or serve institutional interests rather than the client's own interests.

What PRAN Foundation Is Building

PRAN Foundation is designing a free online legal aid programme to address each of these barriers directly — combining AI-assisted intake, a volunteer lawyer network, a multi-language knowledge base, Nyaya Bandhu registration support, and DLSA referral pathways. The goal: any eligible Indian — wherever they are, in whatever language they speak — should be able to access credible legal guidance without paying a rupee, without leaving their home, and without navigating the system alone.

But before we build, we want to hear from you. PRAN is a Section 8 Non-Profit | 12A & 80G Approved | NITI Aayog Listed | Chamber 536, Patiala House Court Complex, New Delhi.

Consumer RightsRERA / HousingLabour Law Women's RightsRTI / PILLok AdalatNyaya Bandhu
Call to the Bar

Are You an Advocate? Volunteer with PRAN.

Justice gaps are not just a resource problem — they are a people problem. PRAN Foundation is building a network of advocates, law students, and legal professionals committed to making legal aid real, not just constitutional. If you have a licence to practice, you have the power to change someone's life.

⏱️

As Little as 2 Hours a Month

PRAN's model is designed around your schedule. One advice session, one drafted notice, one Lok Adalat appearance — every contribution matters. There is no minimum commitment. Give what you can, when you can.

📱

Fully Online — No Physical Clinic Required

All intake, triage, and advice delivery happens through our digital platform. You review pre-summarised cases, provide written guidance, and communicate with clients — from wherever you are.

📜

Recognised Pro Bono Hours

PRAN issues formal acknowledgement letters for all pro bono work done through the programme. These are useful for Bar Council records, Nyaya Bandhu registration, professional profiles, and CSR compliance documentation.

🎓

Open to Law Students Too

Final-year and enrolled law students can join as research and drafting volunteers under the supervision of enrolled advocates. PRAN provides structured mentorship and real case exposure — not mock exercises.

🏛️

Nyaya Bandhu Fast-Track Registration

PRAN assists all enrolled volunteers in registering on the Government of India's Nyaya Bandhu pro bono portal — expanding your reach to the DoJ's national case-matching system at no additional effort.

🤝

Be Part of Something Institutional

PRAN is a Section 8 Non-Profit with 12A & 80G approval and NITI Aayog listing. Your contribution is documented, structured, and part of a growing national legal aid network — not informal or ad hoc.

What volunteer advocates do

📋
Review pre-triaged case summaries and provide written legal advice
✍️
Draft legal notices, complaints, and RTI applications for eligible citizens
⚖️
Appear at Lok Adalat or Consumer Commission hearings for assigned matters
🏫
Lead legal awareness sessions for communities, RWAs, and labour colonies
🔍
Review and mentor law student drafts under the student volunteer programme
📢
Help spread awareness in your district, bar association, or professional network
New · March 2026
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