YourLegalRight publishes plain-language legal information for people trying to understand a possible claim, dispute, denial, injury, or deadline before they decide what to do next. The site focuses on mass torts, consumer protection, employment issues, insurance disputes, and practical legal-rights topics.
Our goal is not to turn a public article into legal advice. It is to help readers understand the issue, identify records that may matter, recognize common deadline risks, and know when individualized review from a licensed attorney is important.
Editorial Approach
Each guide is structured to answer practical questions: what the issue is, who may be affected, what proof may matter, what deadlines can change the analysis, and what a reader can do next. When a topic depends on current litigation, agency guidance, statutes, court orders, medical research, or insurance rules, the article should point readers toward authoritative sources where possible.
Editors review content for clarity, structure, readability, source presentation, and publication safety. That review is different from legal representation. Unless a page names a specific attorney or credentialed reviewer, readers should not assume that an attorney has reviewed their personal facts or approved a legal strategy.
Sources and Updates
YourLegalRight articles may rely on court dockets, multidistrict litigation pages, statutes, regulations, agency materials, medical or scientific publications, policy language, and other public sources. Some legal topics change quickly. Litigation orders, settlement programs, claim deadlines, agency rules, and state laws can change after publication.
For time-sensitive topics, the site should display a published, updated, or reviewed date when available. Readers should still confirm current deadlines and legal options with a licensed attorney in the state or jurisdiction that applies to their situation.
Authors and Reviewers
Some articles are published under the organizational byline YourLegalRight Editorial. That byline means the guide was prepared through the site's editorial process, not that a law firm represents the reader.
When an article has been reviewed by a named attorney, legal professional, medical reviewer, or other credentialed reviewer, the page should identify that reviewer, their relevant credentials, and the review date. If no named reviewer appears, the page should not be read as claiming individualized professional review.
Corrections
YourLegalRight aims to correct material errors when they are identified. Correction requests should identify the page, the statement at issue, and the source or context that supports the requested change. The editorial team prioritizes corrections involving legal deadlines, eligibility criteria, active litigation status, settlement status, safety information, and statements that could affect whether a reader seeks timely legal help. Minor style changes, broken links, and clarity improvements may be handled during routine editorial maintenance.
Business Model and Case Review Requests
YourLegalRight may offer qualification forms or case review prompts. Submitting a form helps organize a reader's information and may allow the submission to be reviewed, routed, or shared with an independent attorney, law firm, intake provider, or legal services partner that handles the relevant type of matter.
Submitting information through this site does not, by itself, create an attorney-client relationship. A lawyer-client relationship forms only if a licensed attorney or law firm agrees to represent the reader under the rules that apply to that representation.
What This Site Is Not
YourLegalRight is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice for a reader's specific situation. The site does not guarantee that a reader qualifies for a claim, lawsuit, settlement, benefit, or payment. Legal outcomes depend on the facts, the evidence, the applicable law, deadlines, available defendants or insurers, and many other case-specific factors.