What the navigator does
The tool reduces a search across many pages to one or two short choices. Its result is not a recommendation for a case. It is a reading map containing a published Hala Law guide and the relevant government service page. There is no case-description field, so names, ID numbers, and documents do not pass through the tool.
Routes cover wages and employment contracts, an absence-from-work report (بلاغ تغيّب) and Qiwa, objections to judgments, enforcement and debt, bounced cheques, inheritance and heirs documents, and a separate exit to official licensed-lawyer directories.
The boundary of the route
The navigator does not decide whether a claim is valid, whether a particular judgment can be challenged, or whether a specific document qualifies for enforcement. Where those questions arise, the result offers general reading, an official source, or the licensed-lawyer exit.
For bounced cheques, the route preserves the established Saudi rule: commercial papers — including cheques under paragraph 9/6 of the Implementing Regulation — are executive instruments under Article 9 of the Execution Law. This is established Saudi law, not a “2024 cheque reform” from another jurisdiction.
Why this tool does not use a language model
The task is bounded and known in advance: connect a broad topic to reviewed pages. A fixed decision tree does that instantly with no API cost and avoids turning a sensitive personal narrative into an external request. Its destinations are also testable: every selection maps to a fixed URL that can be rechecked when a government service changes.
Before opening a government service
Service availability and requirements can change. The result card shows when its source was last checked, while the government page remains authoritative at the point of use. If the question requires assessing a document, weighing facts, or drafting, the navigator's appropriate exit is the Ministry of Justice or Saudi Bar Association directory.