Problems don't stay legal
It is tempting to think of a legal problem as a contained thing, something that lives in an office or a courtroom and then ends. In reality, an unresolved legal problem rarely stays put. It seeps into the rest of a person's life, showing up in their health, their work, and their relationships.
Canadian research links everyday legal problems to real harm beyond the law. People wrestling with these problems report stress, anxiety, and physical illness that they trace back to the problem itself. The strain of an unresolved dispute does not just worry people; over time it can make them genuinely sick.
The fallout reaches into work and home as well. Studies connect everyday legal problems to lost workdays and even job loss, as people miss time, lose focus, or are pushed out of employment by the surrounding turmoil. Relationships feel the pressure too. The problem may begin as a legal one, but its costs are felt in places that have nothing to do with the law.
The bill the public pays
When legal problems push people out of work or into illness, the cost does not vanish. It moves. The Cost of Justice research carried out by the Canadian Forum on Civil Justice tried to put a number on this, and the figure is striking: everyday legal problems were estimated to cost the Canadian state about 799 million dollars per year in knock-on spending.
That total breaks down across systems that have nothing to do with courts. The research estimated roughly 248 million dollars in social assistance, about 450 million dollars in employment insurance, and around 101 million dollars in health care, all flowing from the downstream effects of unresolved legal problems. In other words, when problems go unsolved, the bill simply shifts from the justice system onto other public systems.
This work was not a guess pulled from thin air. The project was funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grant and led by principal investigator Trevor Farrow, giving the estimates a careful research footing. The lesson is that the cost of unresolved legal problems is paid by everyone, even people who never had the problem themselves.
The case for help upstream
If unresolved problems quietly generate these downstream public costs, then the way we usually frame early legal help is backwards. Information, triage, and self-help tools are often treated as a charity, a nice-to-have offered when budgets allow. The cost research suggests they are better understood as an investment.
The arithmetic is straightforward. Helping someone resolve a problem early, while it is still small, is far cheaper than paying for the illness, the lost work, and the social assistance that follow when the problem festers. Spending a little on accessible help upstream can avoid spending a great deal on the consequences downstream.
Seen this way, tools that let people understand and act on their problems early are not just kind; they are sensible public policy. They keep problems small, keep people working and healthy, and keep costs from migrating onto systems that were never meant to absorb them.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on the wider costs of unresolved legal problems. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.