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'Need has never been greater' — Huge £3.9 million grant scheme for legal advice organisations announced

21st January 2026 Written by: Joshua King

The Access to Justice Foundation has announced a new £3.9 million grants programme that will support advice organisations in Scotland, Wales, the Southeast of England, and London.

The scheme will be using unclaimed funds from the Gutmann v SW Trains case (Boundary Fare class action), and will be directed to communities where access to free legal advice is most in demand.

This Improving Lives Through Advice 2026 project from Access to Justice Foundation marks the first programme of its kind redistributing unclaimed class action funds in the UK.

The money available across Scotland, Wales, the Southeast of England, and London, in the form of three-year unrestricted grants.

The grants will primarily be made using £3.7 million in unclaimed settlement funds from the Gutmann v SW Trains case (Boundary Fare class action). The Competition Appeal Tribunal (CAT) decided to award these funds to the ATJF last year, commenting in its ruling that the money “could make a huge difference in facilitating access to justice for the needy and vulnerable”.

Clare Carter, CEO of Access to Justice Foundation, said: “Across Scotland, people's capacity to exercise their legal rights is severely compromised by lack of access to legal help.

"As Scotland's communities face mounting financial pressures, unmanageable debt, and psychological distress, long-term funding of advice services is crucial.

"This programme allows us to channel funds into frontline advice organisations, helping communities get the support they need. And the need has never been greater.”

The Access to Justice Foundation believes there are 122 Scottish communities currently without direct access to a legal aid firm.

Although legal assistance spending in Scotland reached £169 million in 2024–25, the number of solicitors providing civil legal aid fell from 1,041 to 984 over the same period.

Applications for grants will open at 12pm on 16 February 2026 and close at 12pm on 16 March 2026, with grants due to commence in June 2026.

Weekly roundup of Scots law in the headlines including Cape Verde stomach bug legal action — Monday April 13

13th April 2026
This week's review of all the latest headlines from the world of Scots law and beyond includes a large-scale legal action against a holiday provider over alleged widespread illness.

The technological lawyer in the age of AI

8th April 2026
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer merely a tool lawyers use. It is becoming an environment in which legal method may be organised, repeated and scaled, says Dr Corsino San Miguel.

Out of office or out of control? Why absence makes the risk grow stronger for solicitors

8th April 2026
In this month’s article from Lockton, Matthew Thomson looks at the importance of a firm’s risk management procedures in the context of colleague absences.
About the author
Joshua King
Editor of the Journal of the Law Society of Scotland. Leading The Journal's coverage of the legal sector and profession with a clear eye to the future. Qualified in Scots law.
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