Noma Legal

Legal

Terms of use

These terms apply to your use of this website.

Last updated 18 June 2026

These terms govern your use of this website only. They are not our terms of business or engagement terms for legal work. If we agree to act for you, we provide our terms of business to you separately, in writing, and they are not published on this site.

Who runs this site

This website is operated by Noma Legal Ltd, trading as Noma Legal, registered in England and Wales (Company No. 16704392) and authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA No. 8013473). Our full regulatory details are in the footer of every page.

No legal advice, no retainer

The content on this site is general information about us and what we do. It is not legal advice and you should not rely on it as advice for your situation. Contacting us through this site, including by the contact form, does not create a solicitor and client relationship. We only act for you once we have agreed to take on your matter and confirmed our engagement in writing.

Using the site

You may use this site for lawful, personal purposes. Please do not misuse it, for example by trying to gain unauthorised access, or by disrupting how it works.

Our content

The text, design and branding on this site belong to us or our licensors. You may not copy or reuse them without our permission, except as normal use of the site allows.

Links and third parties

Some pages link to other sites or load third-party content, such as our reviews from ReviewSolicitors. We are not responsible for the content or practices of third-party sites. Our use of cookies and third-party content is explained in our cookies policy and privacy policy.

Liability

We take reasonable care over this site but do not promise it will always be available or error free. Nothing in these terms limits our liability where the law does not allow it, including for fraud, or for death or personal injury caused by negligence.

Governing law

These terms are governed by the law of England and Wales, and the courts of England and Wales have jurisdiction.