Answers / Business and contracts / Texas
How to find a business attorney in Texas
For forming a company, drafting or reviewing contracts, or resolving a business or partnership dispute, you need a business (commercial) attorney — and for a lawsuit specifically, a business litigation attorney. Transactional work (contracts, formation) and litigation (suing or being sued) are different skill sets, so match the lawyer to the task. Cost depends heavily on whether you need a document drafted or a dispute fought. In Texas, confirm any attorney you consider is licensed by the Texas state bar and currently accepts business and contracts cases.
What kind of lawyer do I need for business and contracts in Texas?
You need a business or commercial attorney. For contracts, formation, and deals, look for a transactional business lawyer; for a breach-of-contract or partnership lawsuit, a commercial litigation attorney. Specialized needs (intellectual property, employment, tax) may call for that specialist. Make sure the attorney is licensed in Texas, because most legal matters are governed by Texas law and court rules.
How do I find a business attorney who will take my case in Texas?
Find a business attorney licensed in the relevant state who handles your task — contract drafting/review, entity formation, or commercial litigation — and is accepting clients. Attorney Match matches business and contract attorneys to your situation and jurisdiction and drafts an outreach letter. For Texas, you can also browse attorneys licensed there by case type on Attorney Match.
Can I afford a business attorney in Texas?
Business lawyers often charge hourly, but many offer flat fees for defined work like a contract review or an LLC formation. For a dispute where you are owed money, some will consider contingency or hybrid fees. Ask for a flat-fee quote on discrete tasks to control cost.
What if no lawyer in Texas will take my business and contracts case?
For small disputes you can use small claims court, which is built for non-lawyers and has a dollar limit that varies by state. Small business development centers and bar association programs offer low-cost legal clinics. For contracts, reputable templates plus a one-time lawyer review can lower cost. The Texas state bar runs a lawyer-referral service, and legal-aid organizations serve Texas residents who meet income limits.
Signs you likely need a business attorney
- You are signing or disputing a significant contract
- A partner, vendor, or customer is in a serious dispute with you
- You are forming, buying, or selling a business
- You received a demand letter or were threatened with a lawsuit
Contract and business claims have statutes of limitations, and contracts may set their own notice and cure deadlines. Review deadlines before they pass.
Get matched with Texas business and contracts attorneys
Describe your situation and Attorney Match ranks attorneys licensed in Texas whose public profiles fit a business or contract dispute, and drafts an outreach letter for each you can edit and send. One-time $10 — no subscription, no referral fees.
Business and contracts in other states
Attorney advertising. This page is general legal information about Texas law in general terms, not legal advice, and reading it does not create an attorney-client relationship. Attorney Match is a technology service, not a law firm, and does not practice law. Matching is not a referral guarantee or an endorsement of any attorney — results vary and no attorney is guaranteed to accept your case. Confirm any attorney’s license with the Texas state bar and consult a licensed Texas attorney about your specific situation.