Every free way through.
A catalogue of the genuinely free alternative to commonly paywalled things. Books, research, legal help, financial help, mental health, physical health, education, software, AI, media. The free way usually exists. It is just less obvious than the paid one.
Free legal help
Australia has a substantial free-legal-help layer. Most people do not know it exists.
Free financial help
Financial counsellors are completely free, independent, and federally funded. No financial product is sold to you.
Free mental health support
Crisis lines are free, 24 hours, and answered. The Mental Health Treatment Plan via your GP gives you 20 subsidised psychology sessions a year.
Free physical health
Medicare covers more than most people use. State sexual health and immunisation clinics are free and confidential.
Free books and reading
Your state library card unlocks tens of thousands of ebooks, audiobooks, and films through Libby, BorrowBox, and similar. Project Gutenberg has 60,000+ public domain books.
Free research and academic
Most academic papers exist in free form somewhere. Author webpages, ResearchGate, ArXiv, PubMed, SSRN, DOAJ. Or just email the author and ask - most will send it.
Free education and learning
The free education stack is enormous now. Most university content is somewhere online for free if you skip the certificate.
Free media and news
The public broadcasters (ABC, SBS) are free and substantial. The Conversation publishes academic-grade journalism, free.
Free software
Almost every paid productivity tool has a free open-source alternative that works just as well.
Free AI tools
Free tiers change often. Verify limits before relying on them. Don't paste private information into AI tools - your input may be used for training.
Free creative resources
Stock photos, music, fonts, design tools - all free with proper licensing.
On shadow libraries
The editorial position, plain.
Z-library, LibGen, Sci-Hub, Anna's Archive.
You may have heard of these. They are "shadow libraries" - sites that distribute copyrighted books and academic papers without permission. They exist because access to knowledge is structurally expensive and academic publishing has become extractive in ways that even academics themselves widely criticise. Their existence is a well-documented response to a real problem.
They are also, in Australia and most jurisdictions, copyright infringement. We do not link to them here because the legal alternatives above genuinely do cover most needs, and because hosting links carries copyright risk for the site.
For academic papers specifically, before you go down that road: try the author's webpage, ResearchGate, ArXiv, SSRN, or PubMed Central. If none of those works, email the author. Most academics will send you their paper free if you ask politely. They don't see the journal's paywall income anyway.
If your need is a textbook or specific book, try your state library first (Libby, BorrowBox, Hoopla, physical loan). Inter-library loan can get you books that aren't in your state's collection. The wait is slower than a shadow library but the legal path is real.