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A legal fee estimator helps predict the cost of hiring an attorney based on the billing model used: hourly, flat fee, or contingency. Attorney fees vary widely by practice area, geographic location, and experience level.
Formule
Hourly Fee = Attorney Hourly Rate × Estimated Hours + Costs and Expenses
- R
- Hourly Rate ($/hour) — Attorney’s billing rate (ranges $150–$1,000+)
- H
- Hours (hours) — Estimated total attorney hours
- CP
- Contingency Percentage (%) — Percentage of recovery (typically 33–40%)
Guide étape par étape
- 1Determine the billing model: hourly, flat fee, contingency, or hybrid
- 2For hourly billing, estimate the number of hours and multiply by the attorney’s rate
- 3For contingency, calculate the percentage (typically 33–40%) of the expected recovery
- 4Add court costs, filing fees, expert witnesses, and administrative expenses
Exemples résolus
Entrée
Hourly attorney at $350/hr, estate planning, ~10 hours
Résultat
Estimated fee $3,500 + ~$500 in costs = $4,000
Entrée
Personal injury contingency 33%, expected settlement $100,000
Résultat
Attorney fee $33,000 from settlement proceeds
Erreurs courantes à éviter
- ✕Not asking for a detailed fee agreement in writing before engagement
- ✕Forgetting that hourly billing includes paralegal time and phone calls
- ✕Assuming contingency means no cost if you lose — some expenses may still be owed
Questions fréquentes
What is a retainer?
A retainer is an upfront deposit that an attorney draws from as they work. You are billed against the retainer and asked to replenish it when it runs low.
Which billing model is cheapest?
Flat fees are most predictable. Contingency costs nothing upfront but takes a large share of recovery. Hourly is cheapest for simple, quick matters.
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