Information vs. advice
General legal information is broadly available. Explaining how a process works, what a deadline means, or what a term refers to is something anyone can share, including a website, a pamphlet or a software tool, because it speaks to situations in general rather than to one person's case.
Legal advice is different. It means applying the law to a person's specific situation and recommending what they should do, and it is regulated. The shift from describing the law to telling a particular individual how their own matter should be handled is the shift from information to advice.
That distinction defines what a non-lawyer tool may safely offer. A tool can explain, summarize and organize all day long, but the moment it purports to assess a user's specific facts and direct their decision, it has moved into territory reserved for licensed professionals.
Holding this line clearly is not a limitation to apologize for. It is what lets a tool be genuinely useful to many people at once without putting any of them at risk, and it is the starting point for thinking about how such tools should be built.
Why the line exists
The line protects consumers. Advice carries accountability, professional duties and liability: a lawyer who advises a client is bound by competence and confidentiality obligations and can be held responsible when advice goes wrong. Those protections are part of what a person is entitled to rely on when they act on professional guidance.
Strip the guidance of that accountability and the protection disappears, which is why crossing the line can amount to the unauthorized practice of law. The concern is not turf for its own sake but the harm that can follow when someone acts on advice from a source that carries no duty to them and no responsibility if it is wrong.
At the same time, the rules are not frozen. Some jurisdictions are experimenting with regulatory sandboxes to test new service models under supervision, allowing forms of help that fall outside the traditional lawyer relationship to be tried in a controlled setting where regulators can watch for harm.
For anyone building access-to-justice tools, this is the backdrop. The line exists for good reasons, and the responsible path is to design with it firmly in mind while paying attention to how the rules around it are evolving.
Designing for the right side
Responsible tools are built to stay on the right side of the line by design. They organize facts, surface deadlines, and explain options in general terms, giving a person a clear view of their situation and the paths generally available without telling them which one to take.
Crucially, they refer users to qualified help when stakes or risk are high. A well-designed tool recognizes its own limits and treats a serious or complex situation as a signal to connect the person with a professional, not as an invitation to improvise an answer.
The guiding principle is that these tools help people decide rather than deciding for them. The aim is an informed, organized user who can make their own choice or seek advice with confidence, which keeps both the person's autonomy and their protection intact.
This is a design choice, built in from the start rather than patched on later. The boundary between information and advice has to shape how features are scoped, how prompts are written, and where a tool deliberately hands off, so that staying on the right side is part of the architecture rather than an afterthought.
What this is and is not
This is research and educational material on the line between legal information and legal advice in tool design. It is general legal information, not legal advice, and it does not describe any individual's matter.