# Every Free Legal Research Tool Worth Using (2026) Westlaw and Lexis cost $300-$500/month. Your bar association gives you Fastcase for free. PACER charges by the page but RECAP doesn't. Most law students don't know these tools exist until 2L, and most don't use them well even then. Here's the complete list, by category. --- ## Case Law - **Cornell LII** ([law.cornell.edu](https://www.law.cornell.edu/)) β Start here for almost anything. Federal and state statutes, Constitution, CFR, UCC, Restatements. Cross-linking between related sources saves time. - **Google Scholar** ([scholar.google.com](https://scholar.google.com/)) β Best free tool for citation tracking. Find every case that cited a given opinion. Citator is weaker than Westlaw's KeyCite, but it's free. - **CourtListener / Free Law Project** ([courtlistener.com](https://www.courtlistener.com/)) β Federal courts and many state courts. Audio oral arguments. Tied to the RECAP archive (more on that below). - **Justia** ([justia.com](https://law.justia.com/)) β Clean interface for federal and state cases, statutes, regs, treaties. Good for quick reads when you don't need headnotes. - **Fastcase** ([fastcase.com](https://www.fastcase.com/)) β Often free through your state bar membership. If you haven't activated this yet, do it today. --- ## Federal Primary Sources - **govinfo.gov (U.S. GPO)** ([govinfo.gov](https://www.govinfo.gov/)) β Authenticated PDFs of the CFR, Federal Register, U.S. Code, and congressional records. Authentication matters when you're citing in a brief. - **eCFR** ([ecfr.gov](https://www.ecfr.gov/)) β The live, continuously updated Code of Federal Regulations. For historical versions, go back to govinfo.gov. - **Congress.gov** ([congress.gov](https://www.congress.gov/)) β Bills, enacted laws, Congressional Record, committee reports. Your first stop for legislative history.