Hourly contract review can be unpredictable because the bill depends on time spent, so you often do not know the cost until the work is done. A flat fee gives you the price up front. Our flat fee is $299 to review a contract and $499 to draft a new one, with no hourly billing and no surprise invoices.
Getting a contract reviewed sounds simple until you ask what it costs. With traditional hourly billing, the answer is often a shrug and a range, which is exactly what makes people nervous. For a single agreement, that uncertainty can be enough to talk yourself out of a review you actually need.
This article breaks down why hourly billing feels unpredictable, how a flat fee works, and what to compare when you gather quotes. It also explains who does the work and what happens when an agreement is unusually complex. The short version is that a flat fee puts the price in front of you before you commit, so you can make a clear decision instead of guessing.
Why hourly billing feels unpredictable
With hourly billing, the price depends on how long the work takes, and that is hard to know in advance. Emails, calls, and revisions can add up. For a single contract, that uncertainty is stressful, and it can make people sign something they did not fully understand just to avoid the cost.
The result is a common complaint: you cannot get a straight answer about what a simple review will cost.
How a flat fee works
A flat fee solves the uncertainty. You agree on the price before any work begins, so there is no meter running and no surprise invoice. Our flat fee contract service is $299 to review a contract and $499 to draft a new one. The scope and price are confirmed in writing before we start.
For a contract review, that fee includes a full attorney read, a plain English summary of the key terms and risks, a tracked changes redline, and a short call to walk you through it.
What affects the right approach
Flat fees fit most everyday business contracts, such as independent contractor agreements, service agreements, NDAs, and vendor agreements. Unusually long or complex agreements may fall outside flat fee scope. If that is the case, we tell you up front and quote before any work begins, so there is still no surprise.
Who handles the work
Your contract is reviewed by a California licensed attorney, not a template generator. The service is available to businesses nationwide. For a contract governed by another state's law, we will confirm that we can assist or associate local counsel before any work begins. We do not claim to practice the law of every state.
How to compare contract review quotes
If you are gathering quotes, compare more than the headline price. A useful review answers what a clause means, where the risk is, and what to change, not just whether the document is signed. When you compare options, ask:
- Is the price fixed in writing before any work starts?
- Does a licensed attorney actually read the agreement, or is it an automated template?
- What is included, such as a plain English summary, a redline, and a call?
- What happens if the contract turns out to be unusually long or complex?
A flat fee answers the first question cleanly. With our service, the scope and the price are agreed before we begin, and anything outside that scope is quoted up front.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to have a lawyer review a contract?
With our flat fee service it is 299 dollars to review a contract and 499 dollars to draft a new one, agreed in writing before any work starts. There is no hourly billing.
Why is a flat fee better than hourly for a contract?
A flat fee gives you the price before you start, so there is no meter running and no surprise invoice. Hourly billing depends on time spent, which is hard to predict for a single contract.
What is included in the 299 dollar review?
A full attorney read, a plain English summary of key terms and risks, a tracked changes redline with suggested edits, and a short call to walk you through it.
Do you work with clients outside California?
Yes. The service is available to businesses nationwide and is provided by a California licensed attorney. For a contract governed by another state's law, we confirm we can assist or associate local counsel before any work begins.
Ready to get your contract handled for a flat fee? Your consultation is free and there is no obligation. Call (619) 810-1427 or request a free case evaluation. Se habla espanol.
This article is general information, not legal advice, and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws change and every case is different. For advice about your situation, speak with a licensed attorney.