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Self-representation outcomes

The middle path: unbundled and limited-scope legal services

Juge.ca Research (Juge.ca)

Permalink: JUGE.2026.014 · Published 2026-06-19

Unbundled legal services let a lawyer handle one defined part of a case while the client manages the rest, offering an affordable middle path.

The all-or-nothing trap

Many people believe they face a stark choice: hire a lawyer to run the entire case, or do absolutely everything themselves. Framed that way, the decision often comes down to money. Full representation can be expensive, and for a great many people the cost simply puts it out of reach, pushing them toward the second option whether or not it suits their situation.

The trouble is that all-or-nothing thinking misjudges what most people actually need. A litigant might be perfectly capable of handling routine steps but feel completely out of their depth at one particular point, such as preparing for a hearing or understanding a key document. Forcing a choice between everything and nothing leaves that real need unmet.

Unbundling offers a genuine middle path. Instead of buying a lawyer's services as one large package, a person can buy just the piece they need most. This reframes professional legal help as something that can be purchased in parts, matched to a budget and to the specific points where guidance makes the biggest difference.

How unbundling works

Unbundling rests on a limited-scope retainer, an agreement in which the lawyer and client clearly define which slice of the case the lawyer will handle. That slice might be reviewing documents, coaching the client on what to expect, drafting a particular pleading, or appearing for a single hearing. Everything outside that defined slice remains the client's responsibility.

Because the lawyer's involvement is contained, the cost is contained too. A person who cannot afford to hire counsel for an entire matter may well be able to afford an hour of advice at a critical moment, or help preparing one important document. The professional skill is delivered where it counts most, without the price tag of full representation.

This arrangement also keeps the client in the driver's seat. They decide where they need help and where they are comfortable proceeding on their own, drawing on the lawyer's expertise selectively. For people determined to stay involved in their own case, that combination of control and targeted support can be exactly what they are looking for.

Where it fits — and where it doesn't

Unbundling works best for clearer, contained tasks. When a piece of a case can be cleanly separated and defined, a lawyer can step in, do that part well, and step back out. Reviewing a document, coaching a client, or handling a discrete appearance all lend themselves to this approach because the boundaries of the work are easy to draw.

It fits less well for complex or high-conflict files. When issues are deeply tangled, when the other side is aggressive, or when one decision affects many others, it can be hard to carve off a single task without the rest of the case spilling into it. In those situations full representation may still be the wiser choice, and a clear scope agreement remains essential so that both lawyer and client know exactly where the lawyer's responsibility begins and ends.

Despite these limits, unbundling has earned real institutional support. Bar associations have issued guidance to help lawyers offer limited-scope services responsibly, and the Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters has encouraged unbundling as one practical way to widen access to justice. Used thoughtfully, it extends professional help to people who would otherwise have none.

What this is and is not

This is research and educational material on unbundled and limited-scope legal services. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.

References

  1. National Self-Represented Litigants Project (NSRLP), resources on unbundled legal services.
  2. Canadian Bar Association, guidance on limited-scope (unbundled) legal services.
  3. Action Committee on Access to Justice in Civil and Family Matters, “A Roadmap for Change” (2013).

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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