California · Legal doc-prep mills
Legal doc-prep mills in California
If a non-lawyer took your money in California — under the guise of legal doc-prep mills — California law is on your side. Here's how the claim works.
Reviewed July 2026 by the FakeLawyerReport editorial team
Why this is illegal in California
Doc-prep businesses that pick your forms, tell you 'what to say', or advise on strategy have crossed the UPL line. They owe refunds and often statutory penalties.
California's UPL statute: Cal. Bus. & Prof. Code §§ 6125–6126, 6450 (paralegals)
California makes it a crime to hold yourself out as entitled to practice law when you're not an active member of the State Bar. Immigration consultants are separately regulated under the Immigration Consultants Act (Bus. & Prof. Code § 22440 et seq.).
Penalties in California
Up to one year in county jail and/or a $1,000 fine per violation, plus civil damages and disgorgement of fees.
What you can recover
- A full refund of every dollar you paid.
- Statutory or civil damages under California's consumer-protection laws.
- Attorneys' fees in most cases — often no out-of-pocket cost.
- Referral to a licensed California attorney to try to fix the underlying case.
How to report legal doc-prep mills in California
- File with The State Bar of California — the state bar's UPL committee.
- File a consumer complaint with the California Attorney General.
- Submit your case on this site for a free confidential review with a licensed California attorney who handles UPL recovery.
Related resources
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