Site icon NWSidebar

The Changing Contours of “Low Bono”

A man and female attorney signing a document

Up until very recently, whenever I asked other lawyers what they thought “low bono” meant, most ventured an uncertain guess along these lines: “Is it like pro bono, except instead of paying no fee, the client pays a low fee?”

This is a solid guess. After all, “low bono” is a back-formation of “pro bono,” perhaps the most prominent feature of which is the lack of payment to the lawyer for his or her work. At some point, someone replaced “pro” with “low,” and the phrase “low bono” started to refer to legal matters for which lawyers accepted a lower payment rather than no payment at all.

The trouble with that definition is that it’s outdated. It might have worked a decade ago, but things are different now. Lawyers who used to offer discounted rates or sliding fee scales to accommodate clients with limited financial means have been trying out — and adding to their practices — many other models for delivering legal services to these same clients. Today, the lawyers who refer to themselves as offering low bono services have expanded the contours of the concept, so “low bono” now means much more than just doing legal work for reduced fees.

Consider this handful of examples:

These are just some examples of how lawyers consider themselves to be providing low bono services —and, notably, none of them necessarily involves lawyers earning a lower income than they would with a traditional hourly rate. In other words, the “low” in “low bono” no longer necessarily refers to a lawyer working for a low fee. Instead, it has come to refer to lowering any of the barriers which have historically prevented people with moderate financial means from accessing legal services.

On its home page, the WSBA’s Low Bono Section has provided a new working definition of “low bono,” which is brief and still captures the concept’s breadth and potential for ongoing growth: “Low bono is the principle of increasing access to law-related services for people of moderate means who do not qualify for pro bono assistance, but cannot afford the fees private attorneys typically charge under traditional law firm models.”

Is this definition a step in the right direction? What do you think?

About the Author

Exit mobile version