Legal Disclaimer

Last updated: May 2026

NOT LEGAL ADVICE. The information on ClearLegalTips.com is provided for general informational and educational purposes only. It is not legal advice and should not be relied on as a substitute for advice from a licensed attorney in your state.

1. Informational Purpose

All articles, guides, templates, calculators, and downloads on ClearLegalTips.com are designed to help readers understand common U.S. legal topics and processes. They are not designed to recommend a course of action in any specific case.

Legal questions almost always turn on facts unique to one person — and on the law of one particular state or city. Our content presents general patterns. Your situation may be governed by an exception, a recent change in the law, or a procedural rule we do not address.

2. No Attorney-Client Relationship

Use of this Site, reading any article, downloading any template, or contacting us through any channel does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and ClearLegalTips.com, our editors, or any contributor — even when a contributor is a licensed attorney.

Our contributors are acting as journalists and educators on this Site. They are not your lawyer. Anything you send us is not protected by attorney-client privilege.

3. Jurisdictional Limitations

Our content focuses on the law of the United States. Where state law diverges, we attempt to flag the divergence and link to the relevant state authority. However:

  • We do not cover every state for every topic;
  • Local rules (county, city, court division) often add requirements we do not mention;
  • Tribal, federal, and immigration law have their own rules we generally do not address;
  • This Site does not contain advice on international law.

4. Accuracy and Currency

We work hard to keep content accurate, but the law changes constantly. Fees, deadlines, form numbers, and court rules can change at any time, with or without public notice. Always confirm critical numbers (filing fees, statutes of limitation, deadlines) with the official source — typically the relevant secretary of state, court, or agency website — before you act.

If you spot an inaccuracy in our content, please tell us via the Contact page. We refresh our highest-traffic articles quarterly and respond to reader corrections promptly.

5. Templates and Forms

Legal templates posted on this Site are general drafting starting points, not finished documents tailored to a specific transaction or party. Use of any template carries these obligations:

  • You must read the entire template carefully before signing or using it;
  • You must adapt placeholder language to your situation;
  • You must confirm that the template’s terms are enforceable in your state;
  • You may need a notary, witness, or filing to make the document effective.

For high-stakes documents — wills, powers of attorney, business-formation papers, settlement agreements, real-estate deeds — we strongly recommend you have a licensed attorney review the completed draft before you sign.

6. Third-Party Services

Our articles compare and link to third-party legal-services providers (LegalZoom, ZenBusiness, Rocket Lawyer, Nolo, and others). We are not responsible for the quality, accuracy, pricing, or customer service of any third-party provider. Your contractual relationship is with the provider you choose, not with ClearLegalTips.com.

See our Affiliate Disclosure for the compensation relationships we have with some of these providers.

7. Limitation of Liability

To the fullest extent permitted by law, ClearLegalTips.com, its editors, contributors, and affiliates shall not be liable for any damages — direct, indirect, incidental, consequential, special, or punitive — arising out of:

  • Your reliance on any content on this Site;
  • Errors, omissions, or outdated information in any article or template;
  • Inability to access the Site;
  • Outcomes of any legal process you pursue based on Site content.

8. If You Need Real Advice

If your matter is time-sensitive, financially significant, or has a litigation component, talk to a licensed attorney. Most state bar associations operate a lawyer-referral service that can connect you with an attorney for a low-cost initial consultation. Many also operate a pro-bono or low-bono program for income-qualifying matters.

You can find your state bar’s referral service at the American Bar Association directory of legal aid resources.

9. Updates

We may update this Legal Disclaimer at any time. The “Last updated” date above reflects the most recent change. Your continued use of the Site after an update indicates acceptance of the revised disclaimer.