The Ultimate Life-Suckers of Legal Writing
Dear Legal Writer, “As regards,” “Regarding,” and “In regard to” are the ultimate life-suckers of legal writing. In fact, you can lose the word “regard” altogether.
—> “Regard” creates clauses that are long, clunky, and awkward.
Instead, try using “On” or “As to.”
❌ “Regarding the first claim, plaintiff cites no support.”
✅ “As to the first claim, plaintiff cites no support.”
—
❌ “In regard to the Rule 12(b)(6) motion, we are still awaiting the court’s decision.”
✅ “On the Rule 12(b)(6) motion, we are still awaiting the court’s decision.”
—
RECAP:
“regard” —> long, clunky, awkward
“as to”/“on” —> short, pithy, clean
Bonus: This edit will save you space, too!
💌 Amanda
#DearLegalWriter
P.S. There is nothing grammatically wrong with “Regarding,” “In regard to,” or “As regards” (—although the last one screams nails-on-a-chalkboard to me.)
🗳️ What think you? Will you try “On” or “As to”?

This is great information ~ especially for an OG like me 😉. That simple change made the sentence much more “sharp”.