Defamation Lawyers Brisbane

A damaging statement, published online, broadcast, or spread through a professional network, can cost you clients, contracts, capital, and standing. The harm compounds quickly. Every day without action is another day the damage spreads.
Boyle Litigation acts for high-profile individuals, business owners, executives, and corporations in defamation disputes across Queensland and nationally. We bring the same commercial precision to reputation disputes that we bring to every high-stakes matter.

What Is Defamation?

Defamation occurs when a false statement of fact is published to a third party and causes harm to the reputation of an individual or business. It encompasses:
Under the Defamation Act 2005 (Qld) and equivalent national legislation, individuals and (in limited circumstances) corporations have legal remedies including damages, injunctions, and retractions.

Important: Most corporations with 10 or more employees cannot sue for defamation under Australian law, but they may have parallel claims under the Australian Consumer Law for misleading and deceptive conduct. We advise on both.

Who We Act For

Boyle Litigation represents clients on both sides of a defamation dispute:

Those who have been defamed:

We act for individuals, professionals, and business owners whose reputations have been damaged by false or misleading statements, whether online, in media, or through professional channels.

Those facing a defamation claim:

If you have received a Concerns Notice or been threatened with proceedings, early legal advice is critical. Defamation law is highly technical. A strategic response, not a panicked one, determines the outcome.

Common Defamation Scenarios We Handle

The Law Has Changed. Digital Is Now the Battlefield.

Australian defamation law has evolved significantly in response to digital media. The 2021 reforms to the Defamation Act introduced a serious harm threshold, a new single publication rule, and new provisions targeting online platforms and anonymous publishers.
These reforms have real consequences for how claims are assessed, when they can be brought, and against whom.
The grapevine effect is real: a single defamatory post can be shared, screenshotted, and republished within hours. Each republication may constitute a fresh cause of action, but each one also widens the damage. Early, decisive action is almost always the right move.

What We Can Do For You

Depending on your situation and goals, Boyle Litigation can:

Time Limits: Do Not Delay

Under the Defamation Act 2005, the limitation period for defamation claims is one year from the date of publication.
This is a strict deadline. Missing it can extinguish your right to claim entirely. If you suspect you have been defamed, seek advice immediately, even if you are unsure whether you want to proceed.

Why Boyle Litigation for Defamation Matters?

Defamation disputes are not routine legal work. They require:

Boyle Litigation is a specialist commercial litigation firm. We do not practise general law. Every matter we take on is a dispute, and every dispute gets the same discipline: clear strategy, early assessment of leverage, and a focus on outcome, not process.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Concerns Notice and do I need to send one?

A Concerns Notice is a formal written notice sent to the publisher before defamation proceedings can be commenced. It is a mandatory first step under Australian defamation law (with limited exceptions). The notice must specify the defamatory imputations complained of and give the publisher an opportunity to make an offer to make amends. Getting the Concerns Notice right matters; it frames the claim and affects the trajectory of the dispute. We draft these routinely.

It depends on the size of the business. Under the Defamation Act 2005, corporations with 10 or more employees cannot bring a defamation claim. However, smaller businesses and sole traders can. Larger corporations may have parallel claims under the Australian Consumer Law for misleading or deceptive conduct, or for injurious falsehood. We advise on which pathway applies to your situation.
Yes, in appropriate circumstances. Online reviews and social media posts are publications for the purposes of defamation law. We regularly advise on this type of matter and can assist with compelling platform disclosure of anonymous reviewers, demanding removal, and pursuing claims for damages where the harm is serious.
The 2021 amendments to Australian defamation law introduced a requirement that a plaintiff must have suffered, or be likely to suffer, serious harm to their reputation before a claim can proceed. This is a threshold question that needs to be assessed early. It does not mean small matters cannot proceed, but it does mean the strength of the harm evidence matters.
Many matters resolve at the Concerns Notice stage or shortly after, particularly where the publisher would prefer to retract and avoid litigation costs. Matters that proceed to trial can take significantly longer. The timeline depends on the complexity of the claim, the conduct of the other side, and the court’s docket. We provide a realistic assessment of likely timelines at the outset.
Defamation proceedings can be expensive, particularly if contested at trial. We provide clear costs estimates at the outset and advise candidly on whether the claim is commercially viable, including the realistic prospects of a costs order or settlement. We do not encourage claims where the costs are likely to exceed a realistic recovery.
Seek legal advice immediately. You have a limited time to respond with an offer to make amends (if appropriate) or to challenge the claim. How you respond to a Concerns Notice materially affects the trajectory of the dispute and your exposure on costs if the matter proceeds.

Reputation at Risk? Act Now.

Defamation moves fast. Every day of delay is more damage, more republication, more lost ground.

Your dispute. Our battle.

Confidential advice. Decisive action. Direct access from day one.

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