Case review process
How Case Review Works
Lawsuit Center helps visitors understand lawsuit categories and, where available, request a case review from participating law firms or legal advertisers.
Lawsuit Center is not a law firm. This website provides educational information only and does not provide legal advice.
The Basic Process
- Start with a lawsuit category. Visitors usually begin by reviewing a topic such as chemical exposure, water contamination, product liability, drug injury, medical device injury, or personal injury.
- Compare your situation to common claim patterns. Many lawsuits involve repeated exposure, similar products, similar injuries, shared factual circumstances, or similar diagnoses.
- Submit basic information if review is available. If a case review option is available, you may provide information about the exposure, injury, product, diagnosis, location, dates, or other relevant facts.
- Your information may be reviewed. Information may be reviewed by participating law firms, legal advertisers, or intake providers associated with the relevant claim category.
- A firm may contact you if there appears to be a potential fit. Contact is not guaranteed. A case review request does not mean you qualify for a claim.
What a Case Review Is — and Is Not
A case review is a preliminary look at whether your situation may fit a broader lawsuit category or claim pattern. It is not a guarantee that you have a claim, that a law firm will represent you, or that any compensation will be available.
- A review request does not create an attorney-client relationship.
- Lawsuit Center does not decide whether you have a valid legal claim.
- A participating law firm may choose whether to contact you.
- Legal deadlines may apply and can vary by state and case type.
- You should independently evaluate any attorney or law firm before hiring counsel.
Information That May Help
Depending on the type of claim, useful information may include:
- Dates of exposure, injury, diagnosis, or product use
- Names of products, medications, devices, workplaces, or locations involved
- Medical records, diagnosis information, or treatment history
- Photos, receipts, employment records, military records, or other documentation
- Details about whether others experienced similar issues
You do not need to have every document before requesting a review, but the more specific your information is, the easier it may be for a reviewing firm to understand the situation.
Sponsored Listings and Participating Firms
Some law firms may pay for sponsored visibility, featured listings, category sponsorships, landing pages, or advertising placements on Lawsuit Center. Paid placement does not mean Lawsuit Center recommends or endorses a particular attorney or law firm.
Visitors should review any law firm independently before choosing to hire counsel.
Ready to Request a Review?
If you recognize a possible pattern involving exposure, injury, product use, medication, medical device complications, or another lawsuit category, you may request a review.
Request a Case ReviewSubmitting information does not guarantee eligibility, compensation, contact from a law firm, or legal representation.