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Access to justice

Québec up close: small claims, the housing tribunal, and the cost of going it alone

Juge.ca Research (Juge.ca)

Permalink: JUGE.2026.009 · Published 2026-06-19

Most Quebecers meet the justice system at small claims or the housing tribunal, where people generally represent themselves. This entry maps those venues, the time and money they require, and the supports that exist.

Where people actually go

For most people in Québec, the justice system is not the higher courts they see in the news. It is the Small Claims Division, which handles claims of 15,000 dollars or less, and the Tribunal administratif du logement (TAL), which deals with disputes over residential leases. The TAL's jurisdiction over lease matters covers leases under 70,000 dollars, which captures the vast majority of ordinary rental relationships.

These venues are designed to be reached without a lawyer. At small claims, the parties represent themselves: a lawyer cannot act for them at the hearing, although a lawyer may advise them beforehand. That design lowers cost, but it also puts the burden of preparing and presenting a case squarely on the person.

The housing tribunal has its own history. The body now known as the Tribunal administratif du logement was, until 2020, called the Régie du logement. The name changed, but its central role did not: it remains the place where tenants and landlords bring their disputes about repairs, rent, lease terms, and ending a tenancy.

Time and money

Compared with the higher courts, small claims and the TAL are far cheaper. But cheaper is not the same as frictionless, and the friction that hurts people most is often time rather than money.

At the TAL, the wait between filing a case and getting a hearing has run on the order of six to fifteen months, depending on the type of matter. For a tenant living without a needed repair, or a landlord without rent, months of delay are not a neutral pause — the problem continues during the wait, and the stakes climb.

Filing fees apply at these venues as well. They are modest next to the cost of a higher-court action, and low-income people may qualify for exemptions, but they are still a real consideration for someone weighing whether to bring or defend a claim. Taken together, time and cost are themselves access barriers, even in venues built to be accessible.

The help that exists

People navigating these venues are not entirely on their own, and knowing what help exists is half the battle. Legal aid (aide juridique) is available to those who meet the eligibility criteria, providing representation or advice for qualifying matters.

Beyond legal aid, public legal education fills an important gap. Éducaloi offers plain-language explanations of how small claims and the housing tribunal work, and practical guides — such as the Fondation du Barreau du Québec's guide to preparing for the Tribunal administratif du logement — walk people through what to expect and how to get ready.

There is also help inside the system itself. Court and tribunal clerks can explain how procedure works, what forms are needed, and what the steps are, even though they cannot give legal advice or tell a person what to argue. Used well, these supports can turn a daunting process into a manageable one — but only for people who know the supports are there.

What this is and is not

This is research and educational material on Québec's small claims and housing-tribunal landscape. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.

References

  1. Éducaloi, “The Small Claims Court: an accessible tribunal.”
  2. Gouvernement du Québec (Justice Québec), Tribunal administratif du logement — practical guides.
  3. Fondation du Barreau du Québec, guide to preparing for the Tribunal administratif du logement (2025).

Licence & attribution

Published under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Authors retain copyright. Reuse permitted with attribution.

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