← Jaano Haq

How it works

1. You describe what happened

In your own words — no legal jargon, no forms. You can also paste a notice or attach a document (a rent agreement, a termination letter, an FIR copy) and ask about it directly. An uploaded document is read to answer your question and then discarded — it's never stored.

2. It looks up the actual law

Behind the scenes, Jaano Haq searches Indian bare Acts, real judgments from Indian Kanoon, and government portals — reading the specific sections that apply to your situation. You can watch it work: each step it takes (which Act it opened, which judgment it read) appears in the trace under your answer.

3. You get a grounded, cited answer

The answer tells you the rights you have, quotes the exact statutory language that backs them, points you to the correct forum or authority, and lays out the steps to take next. Statute text is quoted verbatim and claims are linked to their sources, so you can verify it yourself.

Built for India

Indian law is often state-specific, so Jaano Haq factors in your state where it matters. Answers are in English today, with more Indian languages on the way.

What it can't do

It's legal information, not legal advice: it can explain the law, but it can't represent you, guarantee an outcome, or replace a lawyer for your specific case. When your situation needs real advice, speak to a lawyer — or, for free legal aid, call 15100 or contact your District Legal Services Authority.

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