Three free, official channels in Louisiana: bar-sanctioned lawyer referral, LSC-funded legal aid, and court self-help. No paid placement, no referral kickbacks.
The state bar’s lawyer-referral service screens attorneys by practice area (look for “landlord-tenant” or “real estate”), checks discipline history, and quotes a low fixed fee for the initial consult. Many state bar LRS programs are certified under ABA Model Supreme Court Rules for Lawyer Referral and Information Service.
What to ask in the first 30 minutes: (1) flat-fee quote for the case through judgment; (2) experience in East Baton Rouge Parish County housing/magistrate court; (3) realistic timeline; (4) settlement vs. trial posture.
The Legal Services Corporation (lsc.gov) funds a statewide legal-aid program in every state. Eviction defense is one of the highest-priority case types nationally. Eligibility is generally 125–200% of federal poverty — the program decides — and intake is by phone or online portal.
Every state Administrative Office of the Courts publishes a free self-help portal with eviction-specific forms, deadlines, and instructions. There’s no income test — landlords and tenants both qualify. Many Louisiana courthouses also run a same-day self-help clinic where a court attorney (not your lawyer, but a neutral resource) walks you through the forms.
An eviction filed against a renter in Baton Rouge is heard in East Baton Rouge Parish — that’s the venue your Louisiana attorney needs to know cold. Median gross rent in Baton Rouge is $1,067, and population is 222,771. Use the state-bar referral if you’re landlord-side, legal aid if you’re a low-income tenant, and the state self-help portal for forms and timelines.
Same county or within 80 km — same court system, same Louisiana attorneys serve all of these:
Three free official channels in Louisiana: (1) Louisiana State Bar Association Lawyer Referral Service — the bar-sanctioned, screened referral with a low-cost initial consult; (2) Louisiana Civil Justice / Lagniappe Law Lab — LSC-funded statewide legal aid for renters at or near 125–200% of federal poverty, with eviction defense as a top-priority case type; (3) Louisiana court self-help — the state Administrative Office of the Courts publishes free eviction forms and instructions, and many courthouses run a same-day self-help clinic.
Initial consultation through Louisiana State Bar Association lawyer-referral is typically $0–$50 for the first 30 minutes. Full eviction defense in Louisiana generally runs $500–$2,500 flat or $200–$450/hour for a contested hearing. Eligible low-income tenants pay $0 through Louisiana Civil Justice / Lagniappe Law Lab. Landlord-side filing of an unlawful-detainer/eviction complaint typically runs $400–$1,200 flat plus court filing fees, depending on whether the case is contested.
Yes, if you qualify financially. Louisiana Civil Justice / Lagniappe Law Lab is funded by the federal Legal Services Corporation and represents eligible low-income Louisiana renters facing eviction at no cost. Eligibility is income-tested (generally 125–200% of federal poverty, set by the program). Capacity is limited — call as soon as you receive an eviction notice or summons, not the day of court.
No. Louisiana renters and landlords have the right to represent themselves (pro se) in eviction court. The Louisiana state court self-help portal publishes the forms and instructions. That said, eviction proceedings move quickly, and a single procedural mistake (missed answer deadline, wrong form, missed defense) can lose the case. If you can get a referral or legal aid intake before the court date, take it.
State authorities: Louisiana State Bar Association; Louisiana Civil Justice / Lagniappe Law Lab; Louisiana Administrative Office of the Courts. Last updated April 30, 2026. For informational purposes only — not legal advice. Linked third-party sites are operated independently; we do not endorse any specific attorney or firm.