Members of the Liberal Party have urged Tasmanian Senator Jacqui Lambie not to walk out on the Palmer United Party (PUP), the crossbencher's chief of staff says.

A tumultuous week of public disputes between Senator Lambie and party leader Clive Palmer has raised questions over whether she will quit to become an independent.

"I just want to see what direction, if I was to breakaway or whether I stay, I just want to get advice and make sure that I have every area covered," she said last week.

The rogue Senator has flown home to Burnie to consult family, friends and voters for advice over the weekend on what her next move should be.

News Limited is reporting the senator confirmed she would quit the Palmer United Party and sit as an independent.

But her chief of staff, Rob Messenger, who was recently disendorsed by the party, maintained she was awaiting final legal advice before a decision was made.

He said she would be taking advice from Tasmanian lawyer Glynn Williams in Canberra on Monday and Tuesday.

Senator Lambie has been suspended from party room meetings and has been estranged from her party colleagues for a number of weeks.

This week she has broken away from the PUP in the Senate on a number of votes, including supporting Labor and the Greens to strike out the Government's Future of Financial Advice (FOFA) changes.

Mr Messenger has told the ABC members of the Liberal Party have urged her to stay with the PUP, while her constituents have made it known they want her to leave.

He said she receives about 800 emails a day, mostly from Tasmanians, with voters urging her to become an independent.

Mr Messenger added that a rumour circulating that Ms Lambie had signed a contract with a lawyer was false, but said she had been offered pro-bono legal representation by a high-profile national firm.