What a legal needs survey measures
A legal needs survey asks ordinary people whether they have run into problems that have a legal dimension — debt, housing, employment, consumer, family — whether or not they ever thought of them as legal. Researchers call these justiciable problems: difficulties for which there is, in principle, a legal remedy, even if the person never sets foot in a court.
This matters because most legal need is invisible to the courts. Counting filings tells you who reached the system; it says nothing about the far larger group who had a problem and resolved it alone, put up with it, or gave up. Legal needs surveys are designed to capture that hidden denominator by starting with people rather than with cases.
What they consistently find
Across decades and dozens of jurisdictions the pattern is remarkably stable. A large share of adults — in Canadian research, roughly half over a three-year period — experience at least one serious, difficult-to-resolve civil or family problem. Most of those problems never reach a lawyer or a court.
The same surveys show that problems concentrate among people already under strain, that they tend to cluster rather than arrive singly, and that many people do not recognize their problem as legal at all. The gap, in other words, is not mainly a shortage of courtrooms; it is a mismatch between how the system is built and how people actually experience trouble.
Reading the numbers responsibly
Survey figures deserve care. Estimates depend on how a problem is defined, how far back people are asked to remember, and how severity is measured, so headline percentages are not always comparable between studies. A reported problem is also not the same as a valid legal claim.
Used well, though, these surveys are the best evidence we have for sizing the access-to-justice gap and for deciding where help should sit. They consistently point upstream — toward early information, triage and self-help — rather than toward the courtroom alone.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on how access to justice is measured. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.