Why this matters
Access to justice is not only about courtrooms. Most people first meet the legal system through everyday problems — housing, debt, consumer disputes, employment, family breakdown — long before any hearing.
Canadian research has consistently documented that a large share of adults experience one or more everyday legal problems over a few years, and that many of those problems are never brought to a lawyer, a clinic, or a court.
Where the gap appears
Cost, delay, complexity and a sense that the system is not built for ordinary people are recurring themes. People often resolve problems on their own, do nothing, or only seek help once a deadline or a court date forces the issue.
Better information, earlier triage, and tools that help people organize facts and deadlines can move help upstream — before a problem becomes a crisis.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on the access-to-justice gap. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.