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Business Contracts & Agreements Legal Services

Solid Agreements. Clear Terms. Protected Interests.

Every deal your business makes lives or dies by what's on paper.

Our business contract attorneys draft, review, and negotiate agreements that say what you mean, protect what you've built, and hold up when tested — so a handshake never turns into a lawsuit.

A Good Contract Is Cheaper Than a Good Lawsuit

Our network of experienced U.S. business attorneys puts your deals in writing properly the first time — and stands behind you if the other side doesn’t hold up their end.

Our Contract Legal Services

Custom Contract Drafting

Agreements written for your specific deal — not adapted from someone else's template.

Contract Review & Redlining

Know exactly what you're signing — risky clauses flagged and rewritten.

Negotiation Support

An attorney negotiates terms with the other side so you keep the relationship.

Contract Enforcement

Demand letters, negotiation, and litigation when the other party won't perform.

Contract Standardization

Clean, reusable master agreements for the deals you make again and again.

Renewals & Amendments

Update existing agreements as your business, pricing, and risks change.

Ongoing Contract Counsel

A lawyer on call for every agreement that crosses your desk — without retainer overhead.

Why Attorney-Drafted Instead of a Downloaded Template?

A template gives you words on a page. An attorney gives you terms that fit your deal, your state's law, and the ways this specific relationship can go wrong.

Downloaded Template

Written for nobody's deal in particular — and often another state's law

Missing clauses you don't know to look for until it's too late

Nobody checks how payment, liability, and termination interact

When a dispute hits, you find out what the fine print actually says

Attorney-Drafted Contract

Tailored to your deal, industry, and state law

Payment protection, liability caps, and exit clauses built in

Flat-fee drafting and review — know the cost upfront

The attorney who wrote it can enforce it if things go wrong

Why Choose Us

Nationwide Coverage

Licensed attorneys across all 50 states.

Fast Turnaround

Most reviews and drafts back within days, not weeks.

Flexible Service Models

One contract or your whole agreement stack — flat fees available.

Experience You Can Trust

Decades of combined experience in business contract law.

Confidential Consultations

Discuss your deals privately, protected by privilege.

Who We Help

Small & medium-sized businesses

Freelancers & agencies

Startups signing their first deals

Contractors, suppliers & service providers

Partners formalizing a venture

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a template contract from the internet good enough?

For a trivial, low-stakes deal, maybe. The problem is that templates are written generically, often for another state's law, and you can't tell what's missing until a dispute exposes it. If the deal involves real money, ongoing obligations, or your ideas, attorney drafting or at least an attorney review is far cheaper than litigating a bad clause later.

How much does it cost to have a contract drafted or reviewed?

Most drafting and review work is flat-fee, quoted before any work starts — no open-ended hourly surprises. Cost depends on the agreement's complexity, and your consultation is free. Payment plans are available.

How fast can I get a contract reviewed before signing?

Most reviews come back within a few business days, and urgent turnarounds are often available when a deal is closing. It's always worth the short wait — signing first and asking later removes almost all of your leverage.

What should every business contract include?

At minimum: a clear scope of work, payment terms with late-payment consequences, termination rights, liability limits, dispute resolution (where and how you'd fight), and — where relevant — confidentiality and IP ownership. Most template disasters trace back to one of these being vague or absent.

Can you review a contract I've already signed?

Yes — an attorney can tell you what you're actually bound to, where your risks and outs are, and how to renegotiate or exit if the terms are bad. If the other side isn't performing, that same review becomes the foundation for enforcement.

Do verbal agreements count for anything?

Some verbal agreements are technically enforceable, but proving what was agreed is expensive and uncertain — and certain contracts (like many real estate and long-term deals) must be in writing to be enforceable at all. If a deal matters, put it on paper. It's a short document that prevents a long fight.

Don’t Sign What You Haven’t Had Reviewed.

One overlooked clause can cost more than a decade of legal fees. Get your agreements drafted and reviewed by attorneys who protect your side of the deal.

Start Your Business Legal Consultation

Work directly with attorneys who understand small business.

Real Reviews By Real Persons

One clause review saved me six figures

A distributor sent over a 'standard' agreement and I nearly signed it the same day. My attorney's review caught an exclusivity clause that would have locked me out of selling through anyone else for five years. He redlined it, the distributor accepted the changes, and I kept my other channels. Best few hundred dollars I've spent.

Brandie Breaux, LA, Contracts & Agreements

Client agreements that finally protect my agency

After a client walked away owing us for three months of work, I had an attorney draft a proper master service agreement — deposits, kill fees, late-payment interest, the works. We've used it with every client since, and payment problems basically disappeared.

Garry Rubero, NY, Contracts & Agreements

Demand letter got me paid in two weeks

A vendor took our deposit and stopped responding. Because our contract was attorney-drafted, the breach was black and white. One demand letter later, we had a full refund plus our costs — no court, no drama. The contract did the fighting for us.

Kylee Holley, TN, Contracts & Agreements

NDA held up when it mattered

I shared a product concept with a potential manufacturer under an NDA my attorney had drafted. When they started shopping a suspiciously similar design around, my attorney enforced the agreement and it stopped immediately. A downloaded template would never have covered what mine did.

Al Mcqueary, MO, Contracts & Agreements
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