legacy-code has 427 questions, 53 watchers, and the following tag wiki:
Originally legacy code meant code 'inherited' from authors or from a previous program/system version. Since Michael Feathers published his "Working Effectively with Legacy Code" book, new definition came to be, where code without tests is legacy code.
Burnination criteria:
Does it describe the contents of the questions to which it is applied?
No. It just means (usually) that the question relates to old code, or code without tests, or maybe an old version of the language/libraries...
and is it unambiguous?
No. The tag wiki even states this: it could be either "inherited" code, or code without tests. In practice, it also often just means "old code."
Is the concept described even on-topic for the site?
Not really. Questions about code that is legacy code are on-topic, but questions about how to handle legacy code in general are (when sufficiently specific) more suited to Software Engineering.SE, as they're usually architecture-type questions.
Does the tag add any meaningful information to the post?
No. The fact that code is legacy code is not meaningful. If there are relevant constraints (e.g., this piece of code cannot have major refactors for legacy reasons) those should be stated in the question, not implied by tags.
Does it mean the same thing in all common contexts?
No. Looking through the questions tagged with it, it's hard to identify any strong theme. It could mean anything from the old version of the Android Support Library to an old version of PHP to a wide variety of questions about working with legacy codebases.