Grants
The State Bar’s Legal Services Trust Fund Program administers three funds: Interest on Lawyers’ Trust Accounts (IOLTA), the state Equal Access Fund (EAF), and the Greg E. Knoll Justice Gap Fund. These funds are granted to nonprofit organizations that provide free civil legal services to Californians who have low and moderate incomes. Find out more about the State Bar’s legal aid funding.
Grant applications
Applications for IOLTA/EAF funding are generally available online in early April for the subsequent grant year and are due in mid-May. See sample applications, guidelines, and contact information for our grant program.
What is a legal aid grant under the IOLTA statute?
The legal aid grant program was established in 1984 to distribute IOLTA revenue to nonprofit legal aid organizations, in accordance with California Business and Professions Code section 6210, et seq. (the Statute). Each year, the State Bar of California awards approximately $30 million in IOLTA and EAF grants to approximately 100 nonprofit organizations.
Who receives funding?
Grantees are funded to provide civil legal services without charge. Grants cannot be used to fund assistance in criminal law matters, outside California, or matters involving nonindigent clients. “Indigent” is defined by the Statute to include individuals whose income is 200 percent or less of the federal poverty threshold, who are eligible for Supplemental Security Income, and/or who are eligible for free services under the Older Americans Act or Developmentally Disabled Assistance Act. In the case of certain grantees whose principal means of service delivery in a given county is through pro bono attorneys, “indigent” also includes any person whose income is 75 percent or less of the maximum levels of income for lower-income households as defined in California Health & Safety Code section 50079.5. (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6213 (d)).
Grants support work on a wide spectrum of legal issues including family law, landlord-tenant, restraining orders, probate, adoption and guardianship, workplace and employment issues, debt and fraud, immigration and citizenship, and senior services, among other areas. A full list of 2025 grantees is available online.
Under authority delegated by the State Bar Board of Trustees, eligibility for grants is determined by the Legal Services Trust Fund Commission. The Statute has been implemented through a number of State Bar Rules and the Eligibility Guidelines for Legal Services Projects and Eligibility Guidelines for Support Centers.
The statute provides for grants to two kinds of organizations:
- Qualified Legal Services Projects (QLSPs), which provide civil legal services without charge directly to indigent clients. These may include law school clinical programs, as defined below.
- Qualified Support Centers, which provide legal training, legal technical assistance, and advocacy support without charge to the legal community.
Qualified legal services projects (QLSPs)
Pursuant to Business and Professions Code section 6213(a), a “qualified legal services project” means either of the following:
(1) A nonprofit project incorporated and operated exclusively in California that provides as its primary purpose and function legal services without charge to indigent persons and that has quality control procedures approved by the State Bar.
(2) A program operated exclusively in California by a nonprofit law school accredited by the State Bar that has been in operation for at least two years at a cost of at least $20,000 dollars per year as an indentifiable law school unit with a primary purpose and function of providing legal services without charge to indigent persons. The program must have quality control procedures approved by the State Bar.
Qualified support center
A “qualified support center” is defined as an incorporated nonprofit legal services center that has as its primary purpose and function the provision of legal training, legal technical assistance, or advocacy support without charge, and which actually provides through an office in California a significant level of legal training, legal technical assistance, or advocacy support without charge to QLSPs on a statewide basis in California. (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6213(b)).
What organizations are eligible?
Applicants must meet the primary purpose requirements described in Business and Professions Code section 6213 (see descriptions above for Qualified Legal Services Projects and Qualified Support Centers). Additionally, in determining primary purpose:
Per State Bar Rule 3.671:
A QLSP is presumed to meet the primary purpose and function requirement when 75 percent or more of its expenditures are directed to free legal services to indigent people.
A Qualified Support Center is presumed to meet primary purpose and function if 75 percent or more of its expenditures are directed to providing legal support services without charge (legal training, legal technical assistance, and advocacy support.)
Applicants must provide an audited financial statement by an independent certified public accountant, or a financial review if its gross corporate expenditures are less than $500,000. (Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code § 6222; State Bar Rule 3.680(E)(1); Eligibility Guideline 2.7.1).
Eligibility for legal aid grants is determined by the Legal Services Trust Fund Commission, subject to approval by the State Bar Board of Trustees. Potential applicants may refer to the following considerations in assessing whether or not to pursue funding:
Your organization may be eligible if your organization is applying as a Legal Services Project:
Your organization does not charge for its services
The majority of your organization’s expenses are directly related to providing legal services to indigent people in California
The vast majority of your organization’s clients are under 200 percent of the federal poverty threshold, are eligible for Supplemental Security Income, or are eligible for free services under the Older Americans Act or Developmentally Disabled Assistance Act
Your organization has clear quality control procedures
In addition:
If your organization is a law school clinic, the clinic has operated for at least two years at a cost of at least $20,000 per year and is an identifiable unit of the law school (e.g., autonomous leadership, designated office space, separate financial schedule for the clinic).
If your organization is applying for a pro bono county allocation, it annually recruits at least 30 attorneys, 5 percent of its county’s actively volunteering attorneys, or 1,000 hours of volunteered attorney time, and meets additional requirements to demonstrate that the principal means of delivery of service is through pro bono.
If your organization is applying as a Support Center:
The majority of your organizations expenses are directly related to providing legal support services without charge
Your organization provides a significant amount of legal support services (legal training, legal technical assistance, advocacy support) to QLSPs in California without charge
Your organization may be ineligible if your organization is applying as a Legal Services Project:
- Your organization charges for some or all of its services, even on a sliding scale.
- Your organization provides some legal services, but spends as much or more annually providing non-legal services (e.g., job training, financial literacy, residential housing, etc.).
- Many of your organization’s clients exceed 200 percent of the federal poverty threshold and are not eligible for Supplemental Security Income or free services under the Older Americans Act or Developmentally Disabled Assistance Act.
- Your organization focuses on out-of-state work, or your program is a California branch of a nationwide nonprofit organization.
- You are a legal services department or a program within an organization that provides a number of non-legal services.
- Your organization is new and does not yet have audited financial statements for a full fiscal year.
In addition:
- If your organization is a law school clinic, the clinic has not been in operation for at least two years at a cost of at least $20,000 per year or is not an identifiable unit of the law school (e.g., no autonomous leadership, no designated office space, no separate financial schedule for the clinic).
- If your organization is applying for a pro bono county allocation, it does not annually recruit at least 30 attorneys, 5 percent of the county’s actively volunteering attorneys, or 1,000 hours of volunteered attorney time, and is not able to demonstrate that the principal means of delivery of service is through pro bono.
If you are applying as a Support Center:
- Your organization charges for its services, even on a sliding scale.
- Your organization spends a significant amount of time providing direct legal services to clients, rather than legal support to direct service providers.
- Your organization focuses on out-of-state work.
- Your organization does not currently provide a significant level of legal support to existing QLSPs. The requirement of a “significant” level of support is discussed in the Support Center Eligibility Guidelines. Under no circumstances will it be met with service to fewer than ten different QLSPs.
- Your organization is a legal services department or program within a larger organization that provides a number of non-legal services.
- Your organization is new and does not yet have audited financial statements for a full fiscal year.
What are the grant amounts?
IOLTA grants and “IOLTA-Formula” Equal Access Fund grants utilize the same formula for determining grant amounts. The statutory formula that determines grant amounts is based on the grantees’ expenditures for civil legal aid without charge to indigent persons. Based on the statutory formula, funding can range from under $10,000 for smaller programs to over $1,000,000 for larger programs. The formula for calculating IOLTA grant distributions, found in Business and Professions Code section 6216, is as follows:
- Fifteen percent of the total available for each grant fund is divided equally among all qualifying Support Centers.
- The remaining 85 percent of available funding is allocated across California’s 58 counties based on each county’s relative share of the state’s population of persons with incomes at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty threshold. For each county where a QLSP is providing services primarily through volunteer attorneys, ten percent of that county’s allocation is set aside for pro bono programs that utilize pro bono attorneys as their principal means of service delivery.
- Applicants for funding as QLSPs identify the counties where they provide free civil legal services, and how much they spent providing such services in each county. Each county’s allocation is proportionally divided among the qualified QLSPs based on their relative share of the total prior-year expenditures for free legal services by QLSPs in that county.
- In any county in which any applicant for QLSP funding is eligible as a “pro bono” program, ten percent of that county’s allocation is set aside for those pro bono programs. This sum is distributed on the same pro-rata basis, among all the “pro bono” programs in that county.
How do I apply?
Organizations interested in applying for legal aid grants should visit the online grant portal to review California Business and Professions Code sections 6210–6228, the State Bar Rules, the relevant Eligibility Guidelines, and a sample application. After reviewing these authorities, if your organization is interested in applying please contact the Office of Access & Inclusion to set up an introductory call. As the application process is time-intensive, we find it is beneficial for new organizations to discuss eligibility requirements and grantee obligations before completing an application.
If you have questions about applying for a grant or to set up an introductory call, call 415-538-2252 or email trustfundprogram@calbar.ca.gov.
Complaints
Grant recipients must abide by the IOLTA Statute and related State Bar Rules to remain eligible for funding. Members of the public who know or believe that a grant recipient fails to meet one or more of the requirements for these grants can submit a written complaint to the Office of Access & Inclusion with details of the alleged violation, and the Office of Access & Inclusion will investigate. (See State Bar Rule 3.692 for more information.) Please note that this process is restricted to whether grantee organizations are compliant with their grant requirements; it is not intended to resolve disputes about level of service (for example). Complaints may be submitted to trustfundprogram@calbar.ca.gov.