Attorney Fee Estimator
Attorney fees vary significantly by practice area, experience level, geographic market, and case complexity. This calculator provides estimated hourly rate ranges based on national survey data from legal industry sources.
Estimate Attorney Fees
This calculator provides general estimates only and is not a substitute for consultation with an attorney. Actual rates depend on the specific attorney, firm size, case details, and local market conditions. Many attorneys offer free initial consultations. This is not legal advice.
How Attorney Fees Are Structured
Attorneys use several common fee arrangements depending on the practice area and case type:
| Fee Type | How It Works | Common In |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly Rate | Billed per hour of work; most common arrangement | Family, criminal, business, estate, tax |
| Contingency | Attorney takes a percentage (typically 33-40%) of the recovery; no fee if no recovery | Personal injury, some employment |
| Flat Fee | Fixed price for a defined scope of work | Simple estate planning, uncontested divorce, bankruptcy filing |
| Retainer | Upfront deposit against which hourly fees are billed | Most hourly-rate arrangements |
Factors That Affect Attorney Costs
- Geographic market — attorneys in major metros charge 2-3x rural rates
- Experience and reputation — senior partners at large firms command premium rates
- Case complexity — multi-party litigation, expert witnesses, and appeals add cost
- Firm size — large firms have higher overhead reflected in rates; solo practitioners are often more affordable
- Urgency — emergency filings, expedited timelines, and deadline pressure increase costs
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a typical retainer amount?
Retainers vary widely. For family law, $2,500–$10,000 is common. For criminal defense, $5,000–$25,000 depending on charge severity. Business litigation retainers can range from $10,000 to $50,000 or more. The retainer is typically applied against hourly billing and replenished when depleted.
Do all personal injury attorneys work on contingency?
Most personal injury attorneys offer contingency arrangements, but not all cases qualify. The standard contingency fee is 33% if settled before trial and 40% if the case goes to trial. Some states cap contingency fees. The client typically remains responsible for court costs and expenses regardless of outcome.
How can I reduce legal costs?
Organize your documents before meetings. Communicate via email rather than phone when possible (calls are billed in increments). Ask for itemized billing. Consider unbundled legal services where the attorney handles specific tasks while you handle others. Get fee agreements in writing.