19 January 2026
by Niall Christie

A new £3.9million scheme by the Access to Justice Foundation has been unveiled. 

A new, three-year unrestricted grants programme will support the delivery of free legal advice in Scotland, it has been announced. 

The Access to Justice Foundation has unveiled its new £3.9million fund that will support advice organisations in Scotland. 

The new programme will be primarily using £3.7m in unclaimed funds from the Gutmann v SW Trains case (Boundary Fare class action) and directed to communities where access to free legal advice  is most needed.

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”. 

This is the first programme that redistributes unclaimed class action funds in the UK and is  based on a grant-making strategy designed to ensure that unclaimed money still reaches  those in need in the UK. 

CEO of Access to Justice Foundation, Clare Carter, 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 programme has been designed to provide longer-term, unrestricted funding in recognition of the financial pressures facing advice organisations and the importance of stability in sustaining frontline services. 

Access to justice in Scotland is increasingly out of reach, with 122 Scottish communities  currently lacking 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. 

In September 2025, the Scottish Parliament's Equalities, Human Rights and Civil Justice  Committee published a report which called on the Scottish Government to “take urgent action” to improve the delivery of the civil legal assistance and in turn improve access to justice.

In addition to Scotland, the programme will target organisations delivering services in London,  the Southeast of England, and Wales. 

These regions have been selected according to where class  members from the Boundary Fare case are based, areas that face the most persistent gaps in  access to free legal advice, and where ATJF have no, or very few, grants currently distributed.

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.

 

Grants programme announced to support free legal advice in Scotland - TFN

The above information is from a Third Force News (TFN) Newsletter Fri 21/01/2026