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Legal FAQ

Answers to the most commonly asked legal questions, organized by practice area.

Jurisdiction context
Applies to
United States legal rules and public procedures. Local court, state, provincial, municipal, or prefectural variations may still apply.
Last reviewed
2026-03-06
Methodology
Answers below are framed for United States and point users to the authority or official portal that usually controls the issue.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🧭 Editorial review
Review process
Independent page review focuses on jurisdiction labeling, source-link checks, plain-language caution wording, and disclaimer consistency. Unless a page says otherwise, this is not a signed attorney opinion.
Source check
Official public sources are linked on the page where available and should be rechecked before filing, payment, or court action.
Update cadence
Review date shown on page: 2026-03-06. Earlier recheck is recommended for deadline-sensitive or regulator-updated topics.

πŸ‘¨β€πŸ‘©β€πŸ‘§ Family Law

Which authority usually handles family matters in United States?
Usually family court, registry, or court-approved mediation. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with identity records, income proof, parenting records, and prior orders. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
hearing, mediation, and disclosure dates are usually strict
What outcomes are usually available?
custody orders, support orders, property division, or modification
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
informal arrangements and poor financial disclosure create avoidable disputes
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / United States Courts / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

πŸ’Ό Employment Law

Which authority usually handles employment matters in United States?
Usually labor agency, employment tribunal, or civil court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with employment contract, pay slips, schedules, messages, and HR records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
administrative complaint windows are often short
What outcomes are usually available?
back pay, severance, reinstatement, penalties, or negotiated exit
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
missing internal complaints or filing deadlines weakens leverage
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / U.S. Department of Labor / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ“ Contract Law

Which authority usually handles contract matters in United States?
Usually county, district, or state civil courts. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with contracts, invoices, receipts, screenshots, and proof of loss. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
filing and service deadlines differ by forum and claim type
What outcomes are usually available?
payment orders, damages, settlement, or enforcement
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
wrong venue, weak service, or thin evidence often delays recovery
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / United States Courts / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

βš–οΈ Criminal Law

Which authority usually handles criminal matters in United States?
Usually police, prosecutor, criminal court, or pretrial judge. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with charge sheets, custody records, witness details, and defense material. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
custody hearings and appeal windows move quickly
What outcomes are usually available?
release, dismissal, plea resolution, sentence mitigation, or appeal
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
speaking without counsel or violating release conditions increases exposure
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / United States Courts / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🏠 Property & Real Estate

Which authority usually handles property matters in United States?
Usually housing court, civil court, registry, or local authority. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with lease, notices, rent history, inspection photos, and payment records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
notice periods and filing windows are often decisive
What outcomes are usually available?
repair orders, rent recovery, possession defense, transfer, or damages
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
self-help actions and undocumented payments frequently undermine the case
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / HUD / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

πŸ›’ Consumer Rights

Which authority usually handles consumer matters in United States?
Usually consumer regulator, ombudsman, payment platform, or civil court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with receipts, ads, chats, warranty requests, and bank or card records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
complaint, refund, and chargeback windows can be short
What outcomes are usually available?
repair, replacement, refund, chargeback, or administrative complaint
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
delay and lack of written complaint records reduce recovery options
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / Federal Trade Commission / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

✈️ Immigration Law

Which authority usually handles immigration matters in United States?
Usually immigration authority, consulate, police registration office, or court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with passport, visa, permit, sponsor papers, and identity records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
visa expiry, reporting, and renewal deadlines are critical
What outcomes are usually available?
permit issue, renewal, appeal, status correction, or judicial review
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
overstaying or working without authorization creates severe barriers
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / USCIS / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🧾 Tax Law

Which authority usually handles tax matters in United States?
Usually tax authority and tax appeal body or court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with returns, invoices, payroll records, bank statements, and ledgers. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
filing, payment, and objection periods are unforgiving
What outcomes are usually available?
amendment, installment plan, penalty relief, refund, or appeal
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
informal records and missed objections cause avoidable penalties
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / IRS / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

πŸ’‘ Intellectual Property

Which authority usually handles ip matters in United States?
Usually IP office, platform complaint system, customs, or civil court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with registration certificates, use evidence, contracts, and screenshots. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
opposition, renewal, and takedown windows matter
What outcomes are usually available?
registration, injunction, takedown, customs action, or damages
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
weak chain of title and delayed enforcement dilute protection
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / USPTO / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🏒 Business Law

Which authority usually handles business matters in United States?
Usually registry, regulator, tax office, or commercial court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with formation records, licenses, resolutions, ownership records, and filings. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
registry, tax, and disclosure deadlines recur throughout the year
What outcomes are usually available?
registration correction, compliance filing, shareholder action, or restructuring
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
mixing personal and company assets creates major exposure
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / USA.gov / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

πŸ₯ Medical & Health Law

Which authority usually handles medical matters in United States?
Usually hospital complaint office, health regulator, insurer, or court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with medical charts, bills, consent forms, referrals, and expert material. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
complaint and limitation periods vary by harm and forum
What outcomes are usually available?
record correction, refund, discipline complaint, compensation, or review
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
late record requests and weak causation evidence are common problems
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / HHS / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

πŸ”’ Cyber & Privacy Law

Which authority usually handles cyber matters in United States?
Usually data protection authority, regulator, platform, or court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with privacy notice, contracts, screenshots, access logs, and incident notices. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
breach-reporting and complaint windows can be immediate
What outcomes are usually available?
access, deletion, correction, complaint, penalty request, or court relief
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
collecting excess data or ignoring response deadlines increases liability
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / FTC Privacy & Security / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

🌍 International Law

Which authority usually handles international matters in United States?
Usually immigration authority, consulate, police registration office, or court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with passport, visa, permit, sponsor papers, and identity records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
visa expiry, reporting, and renewal deadlines are critical
What outcomes are usually available?
permit issue, renewal, appeal, status correction, or judicial review
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
overstaying or working without authorization creates severe barriers
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / USCIS / USA.gov and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🌿 Environmental Law

Which authority usually handles environment matters in United States?
Usually registry, regulator, tax office, or commercial court. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with formation records, licenses, resolutions, ownership records, and filings. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
registry, tax, and disclosure deadlines recur throughout the year
What outcomes are usually available?
registration correction, compliance filing, shareholder action, or restructuring
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
mixing personal and company assets creates major exposure
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / USA.gov / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources

🏘️ Housing & Tenancy

Which authority usually handles housing matters in United States?
Usually housing court, civil court, registry, or local authority. The first practical step is to confirm which office or court has power over your specific facts.
What documents should I prepare first?
Start with lease, notices, rent history, inspection photos, and payment records. Official notices and dated communications are especially valuable.
What deadlines matter most?
notice periods and filing windows are often decisive
What outcomes are usually available?
repair orders, rent recovery, possession defense, transfer, or damages
What is the main risk if I wait too long?
self-help actions and undocumented payments frequently undermine the case
Which official sources should I check?
Start with U.S. Code / HUD / United States Courts and verify any local variation before filing.

πŸ”Ž Official sources