U.S. Legal System Listings
The U.S. legal system spans 94 federal district courts, 13 circuit courts of appeals, 50 state court systems, and thousands of administrative tribunals — a structural complexity that makes organized reference listings essential for researchers, journalists, students, and self-represented litigants alike. This page describes what the listings on this site include, what they deliberately exclude, how verification is handled, where coverage gaps exist, and how individual listing categories are classified. Understanding this structure helps readers locate the right reference material without misreading a directory entry as legal advice or as an endorsement of any listed entity.
What listings include and exclude
Listings on this site are reference entries only. Each entry documents publicly available identifying information about legal institutions, courts, bar-licensed professional categories, regulatory bodies, and legal aid organizations operating within the United States. The U.S. Legal System Directory Purpose and Scope page defines the full editorial mandate.
Included information types:
- Official court names, jurisdictional boundaries, and authorizing statutes or constitutional provisions
- Federal and state agency names with enabling legislation citations (e.g., the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 551–559, for federal agencies)
- Bar association registries by state, drawn from publicly published state supreme court licensing records
- Legal aid organization names and geographic service areas, as reported to the Legal Services Corporation under the LSC Act (42 U.S.C. § 2996)
- Alternative dispute resolution body classifications with reference to applicable rules (e.g., AAA Commercial Arbitration Rules, JAMS Comprehensive Arbitration Rules)
- Law school programs accredited by the American Bar Association, as listed in the ABA-required 509 Disclosure Reports
Excluded from all listings:
- Attorney contact information, direct referral pathways, or fee structures
- Case outcome data, win rates, or performance rankings for any listed professional or entity
- Opinions on the quality, reliability, or competence of any institution
- Links to private lead generation services or attorney matching platforms
- Any content that could constitute a recommendation to engage a specific legal professional (see How to Find a Licensed Attorney for guidance on independent verification)
The distinction between a reference listing and a service recommendation is treated as a hard editorial boundary. Bar disciplinary rules in most U.S. jurisdictions — including Model Rule 7.3 of the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct — restrict targeted solicitation; this site does not participate in that solicitation chain in any form.
Verification status
Listings are classified under one of three verification tiers based on the source used at the time of compilation:
- Primary-verified: Information sourced directly from a government database, court PACER record, official state bar registry, or federal register entry. Primary-verified entries carry the highest confidence status.
- Secondary-verified: Information sourced from a named institutional publication (e.g., ABA 509 reports, LSC grant recipient lists, JAMS or AAA published rosters) that itself draws on primary government data.
- Unverified / Pending: Entries drawn from non-official third-party aggregations pending cross-check against primary sources. These entries are flagged and should not be cited in formal research without independent confirmation.
The federal courts listing set draws on the U.S. Courts official directory maintained by the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts (uscourts.gov). State court entries cross-reference the National Center for State Courts (NCSC) Court Statistics Project. For context on how individual court structures relate to listed entries, see Structure of the U.S. Court System and How Federal Courts Work.
Verification status does not imply legal standing, accreditation, or endorsement. An entry marked "primary-verified" confirms only that identifying data was confirmed against a named official source.
Coverage gaps
No directory of the U.S. legal system achieves comprehensive coverage, and this one does not claim to. Documented gaps include:
- Tribal court systems: The 574 federally recognized tribes (per the Bureau of Indian Affairs Federal Register notice) operate sovereign judicial systems not uniformly catalogued in any single federal database. Tribal court listings here are partial.
- Specialized federal tribunals: Article I courts — including the U.S. Tax Court, U.S. Court of Federal Claims, and U.S. Bankruptcy Courts — are partially covered; coverage is being expanded against the Administrative Office of U.S. Courts docket data.
- Local municipal courts: An estimated 13,500+ municipal and justice-of-the-peace courts operate at the city and township level (National Center for State Courts estimate). These are not systematically listed.
- Private arbitration providers: Hundreds of private arbitration services exist beyond AAA and JAMS. Only providers with published rule sets available for public review are included. See Alternative Dispute Resolution Overview for definitional context.
- Emerging regulatory bodies: New administrative structures created by executive order or agency rulemaking may not appear until secondary-source documentation is available.
Gaps are documented rather than obscured. A listing absence does not indicate that an institution lacks legal standing or authority.
Listing categories
The directory organizes entries into seven primary categories, each reflecting a distinct structural role in the U.S. legal framework:
- Federal Article III courts — Constitutional courts created under Article III, including the Supreme Court, 13 circuits, and 94 district courts. Jurisdictional scope is governed by 28 U.S.C. §§ 1–39.
- Federal Article I courts and tribunals — Legislative courts and administrative adjudicative bodies, including bankruptcy courts, the Tax Court, and agency-level ALJ proceedings under the APA.
- State court systems — Trial courts of general jurisdiction, intermediate appellate courts, and courts of last resort across all 50 states plus the District of Columbia. How State Courts Work details the operational distinctions.
- Federal regulatory and administrative agencies — Agencies with adjudicatory authority under the APA, listed with their enabling statutes. Administrative Law and Agencies provides the doctrinal framework.
- Bar associations and licensing authorities — State supreme courts and integrated bar bodies responsible for attorney admission and discipline under each jurisdiction's rules of professional conduct.
- Legal aid and pro bono organizations — LSC-funded and non-LSC nonprofit providers organized by state and service population. Legal Aid and Pro Bono Resources explains eligibility structures.
- Alternative dispute resolution providers — Arbitration, mediation, and neutral evaluation services with publicly available procedural rules, cross-referenced against Mediation vs. Litigation in the U.S. for comparative context.
Each category uses internally consistent classification criteria. An entity does not appear in more than one primary category, though cross-references between categories are noted where jurisdictional or functional overlap exists — for example, where a federal agency exercises both rulemaking and adjudicative authority simultaneously.