A contract is only as strong as the words in it, and the time to get those words right is before anyone signs — not after a deal goes sideways. In Irving, business and contract lawyers do two related jobs: transactional work, where they draft, review, and negotiate agreements so problems never start, and litigation, where they enforce or defend a contract when one side does not perform.
Updated May 27, 202612 min readEditorially independent
The firms below each appear across at least two independent sources — Justia, Avvo, Super Lawyers, Martindale-Hubbell, Chambers, U.S. News – Best Lawyers, or FindLaw — and serve Irving-area businesses, from startups to established companies. We weighted verifiable credentials and real business-law experience over advertising.
For a business owner, the questions that matter are sector fit, responsiveness, and predictable cost. A lawyer who papers deals like yours every week moves faster and spots the clauses that cause fights. Read each profile for whether the firm leans transactional or litigation, then call two or three and compare how they scope the work.
How we picked these 10: We cross-referenced peer rankings and directories (Justia, Avvo, Super Lawyers, Martindale-Hubbell, Best Lawyers, Expertise.com, FindLaw) and each firm's own published practice pages. Every firm below appeared in at least two independent sources and has a verifiable contracts practice serving Irving. We do not accept payment for placement, and we do not write sponsored reviews. More on our methodology →
1
Shamoun & Norman, LLP
Serving Irving (Farmers Branch, TX)Boutique
Practice focus: Complex commercial and business litigation, breach of contract, business fraud, corporate disputes
A Dallas-area litigation boutique handling complex business disputes such as breach of contract, finance, fraud, and corporate governance. Managing partner C. Gregory Shamoun has practiced for more than two decades and is also a certified mediator. The firm appears in reported Texas appellate decisions, including a Texas Supreme Court case.
Fee structure
Flat fee / hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
1800 Valley View Ln, Ste 200, Farmers Branch, TX 75234
Practice focus: Business contracts and agreements, corporate law, M&A, non-compete and partnership matters
Founded in 2010, the firm serves Irving clients from startups to established companies on buyouts, mergers and acquisitions, non-compete agreements, and risk management. Managing partner Rakesh Patel is a member of the State Bar of Texas and the Dallas Bar Association's Real Estate Law Section, and the firm's attorneys hold decades of combined experience.
Practice focus: Business contract drafting, review and negotiation, new ventures, partnerships, M&A
This Las Colinas firm guides business clients through the company lifecycle, from entity formation and contract negotiation to capital sourcing and divestiture. Senior counsel Michael Caolo Jr. has practiced more than 36 years and serves as outsourced general counsel for small businesses, with a clean disciplinary record.
Practice focus: Business contract review, entity formation, trademark registration, corporate matters
In practice since 1974, this Irving solo firm works with corporate clients on employment, real estate, and contract-related matters, plus entity formation and trademark registration. Principal J. Michael Jaynes also handles probate and family matters for area businesses and families.
Practice focus: Commercial litigation including contract breaches, partnership disputes, business torts, transactions
A boutique firm whose attorneys trained at leading national firms, handling business litigation, commercial transactions, and construction law. The firm is recognized in Chambers USA and listed in U.S. News – Best Lawyers “Best Law Firms,” with attorneys recognized by Super Lawyers and listed as serving Irving.
Practice focus: Business litigation, breach of contract, partnership, shareholder, employment and non-compete disputes
The firm represents small-to-medium businesses and corporate entities across Texas in disputes including contract breaches, partnership conflicts, and non-compete matters, and provides outside general-counsel services. Founder Sul Lee is recognized on Super Lawyers and is listed among top-rated contracts attorneys serving Irving.
Practice focus: Transactional business law, formation, financing, M&A, plus IP and contract litigation
An intellectual property, technology, and business law firm offering business planning, formation, financing, M&A, and licensing alongside litigation. Founder Darin Klemchuk has handled more than 200 IP disputes, and the firm has multiple attorneys recognized on Super Lawyers and Rising Stars lists.
Practice focus: Corporate transactions and securities, complex commercial litigation, technology contracts
A technology-focused, full-service firm representing clients from startups to Fortune 50 companies, with corporate transactions, complex commercial litigation, IP, and employment law. Founder William A. Munck is recognized by Super Lawyers and is listed handling Texas contracts matters in the Irving area; the firm is profiled by Best Lawyers.
Practice focus: Business planning, management and transactions, business agreements, elder law, estate planning
The firm serves Irving and the surrounding metro, counseling new and existing business owners on the legal aspects of business planning, management, and transactions, and also practices elder law and estate planning. Namesake Stephen Niermann has counseled businesses since 1991 and is admitted before the U.S. Supreme Court.
Practice focus: Business law, startup document preparation, agreements and entity changes, IP and employment defense
The firm serves the Irving metro with business-law services including startup document preparation, business agreements, and entity changes, plus company-protection work in employment and IP disputes. Managing partner Corby Bell is a registered patent attorney; partner Mandy Dorman focuses on business disputes.
Routine drafting and review is often flat-fee transactional work. A high-stakes negotiation, an outside-general-counsel relationship, or a breach-of-contract dispute needs a business lawyer who negotiates and litigates regularly.
Ask who actually handles your matter day to day, how the firm communicates, and how it charges. A short, honest first conversation tells you more than any ranking, and the firms above are a starting point for that conversation — not a substitute for it.
What to look for in a contract lawyer
The firms above are a starting point, not a verdict. The right lawyer for you depends on your facts, your budget, and how you want to be treated. Use these five signals to compare them.
Relevant, recent experience. “We handle everything” is a weakness, not a strength. You want a lawyer who works matters like yours in Irving week in and week out, not one who takes them occasionally between unrelated cases. Repeated, current experience with situations like yours is the single best predictor of a good outcome.
Straight talk about your situation. A good lawyer tells you what is strong and what is weak at the first meeting, not just what you want to hear. If everything sounds easy and the result sounds guaranteed, be skeptical — real matters carry real risk, and an honest lawyer names it up front.
Communication you can live with. Most complaints about lawyers are not about losing — they are about silence. Ask who returns your calls, how fast, and whether you will reach the actual attorney or only a screener. Set that expectation before you sign, because it rarely improves later.
Fees in writing, in plain English. You should leave the first meeting knowing exactly what you will pay, what it covers, and what could cost extra. A clear written fee agreement is a sign of a well-run practice; a vague “don't worry about it” is a sign to keep looking.
Local knowledge. A lawyer who works in Irving regularly knows the local courts, agencies, and counterparts, how matters tend to resolve, and which outcomes are realistic. That practical knowledge is hard to fake and easy to verify — just ask.
What a contract matter looks like in Irving
Contract work splits cleanly. Transactional matters — drafting or negotiating a sales agreement, a services contract, a lease, an operating or partnership agreement, an NDA, or a non-compete — move on the deal's timeline, and a lawyer's job is to allocate risk clearly and close. Disputes — most often breach-of-contract claims — move on the court's or arbitrator's calendar and can run from months to more than a year.
In TX, commercial agreements are governed by state common law and, for goods, the state's adoption of the Uniform Commercial Code. Many business contracts include arbitration and attorney-fee provisions, which shape how a dispute plays out and how much it costs.
What does a contract lawyer in Irving cost?
Drafting and review are often handled as flat fees for standard agreements or hourly for negotiated, custom work. Hourly rates for Irving-area business lawyers commonly run from roughly $250 to $600 an hour depending on firm size and seniority. A focused contract review is usually a few hundred dollars and is among the best-value legal spending a business can do.
Breach-of-contract litigation is billed hourly and is far more expensive than prevention, which is the whole argument for getting the agreement right up front. Some collection-type claims are handled on a hybrid or contingency basis. Ask each firm to scope the work and put the fee in writing.
Red flags to watch for
Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can promise a specific result. If a firm guarantees how your contract matter will end before reviewing your file, walk away.
The disappearing senior lawyer. You meet a name partner at intake, then never speak to them again while a junior runs the file unsupervised. Ask in writing who your day-to-day lawyer will be.
No verifiable track record. “We have handled thousands of cases” is marketing. Real evidence is named results, peer recognition such as Super Lawyers or Best Lawyers, and a clean record with the state bar.
Pressure to sign immediately. A reputable firm gives you the engagement letter in writing and time to read it. High-pressure intake is a sign of a volume mill, not a careful practice.
Vague fee terms. “Don't worry about the cost” is a red flag. Every legitimate firm puts the fee, what it covers, and what triggers extra charges in writing.
10 questions to ask in your free consultation
Most firms on this list offer a free or low-cost first consultation. Use it, take notes, and compare at least two firms before you sign.
Who, specifically, will handle my matter day to day? Get a name and an email, not just a firm brand.
How many matters like mine have you handled in the last three years? You want a number, not a brochure line.
What is your fee, and what does it cover? Get the answer in writing before you sign anything.
What costs am I responsible for, and when? Out-of-pocket expenses surprise people. Ask up front.
What is the realistic range of outcomes here? A good lawyer gives you a range. A weak one promises the high end.
How long will this take? Ask for an honest estimate with the assumptions stated.
Who else might work on this — associates, paralegals, outside experts? Know who is actually on your team.
How and how often will I hear from you? Set the communication expectation now, not later.
What is the worst-case outcome? A lawyer who will not discuss downside risk is selling you something.
What happens if I want to change lawyers later? Make sure you understand how your file and any fee are handled.
What’s specific about Irving
State law and the UCC govern. TX’s common law and its version of the Uniform Commercial Code control most commercial agreements. A lawyer who works in these courts knows how local judges read disputed terms.
Non-competes must be reasonable. Restrictive covenants are enforced only when reasonable in time, geography, and scope. Getting that balance right at drafting is far cheaper than litigating it later.
Fee and arbitration clauses matter. Whether a contract shifts attorney's fees to the loser, and whether it sends disputes to arbitration, can change the economics of any fight. Read those clauses before you sign, not after.
Your first steps this week
If you are dealing with a contract matter in Irving right now, a few moves protect you while you take the time to choose the right lawyer.
Write down the timeline. Put the dates, names, and what was said on paper while it is fresh. Details that feel obvious today are easy to lose in a month, and a clear timeline makes your first consultation far more productive.
Save everything. Keep the documents, emails, contracts, and records connected to your situation in one place. The strength of a matter often comes down to what you can show, not just what you can say.
Do not sign or agree to anything under pressure. Whether it is the other side, an agency, or a fast-talking salesperson, you are allowed to say you want to speak with your own lawyer first. A reputable Irving firm respects that; anyone who does not is telling you something.
Book two consultations. Most firms above offer a free or low-cost first meeting. Talk to at least two before you commit, and choose the contract lawyer who explains your options clearly and answers your questions without rushing you.
Talk to a Irving contracts lawyer — free, no obligation
Tell us what is going on. We'll match you with vetted Irving firms from the list above. Most respond within one business day.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a lawyer to write a business contract in Irving?
For low-stakes, standard agreements, a careful template can work. For anything with real money, ongoing obligations, or unusual terms, a lawyer who drafts the agreement clearly is far cheaper than litigating an ambiguous one later.
What does a contract lawyer actually do?
They draft, review, and negotiate agreements to allocate risk and prevent disputes, and they enforce or defend contracts in court or arbitration when a deal breaks down. Many also serve as outside general counsel for small businesses.
How much does a contract lawyer cost in Irving?
Standard drafting and review are often flat fees or a few hundred dollars; negotiated work is hourly, commonly $250 to $600 an hour in the Irving market. Litigation is billed hourly and costs far more than prevention.
What is the statute of limitations on a contract claim?
It varies by state and by whether the contract is written or oral — written contracts generally carry a longer window than oral ones. Ask a Irving lawyer about the deadline that applies to your facts, because missing it can end a claim.
What is the difference between a written and oral contract?
Both can be enforceable, but written contracts are far easier to prove and usually carry a longer limitations period. Some agreements must be in writing to be enforceable at all. Put important deals in writing.
What should every business contract include?
Clear parties and obligations, payment terms, a term and termination provision, dispute-resolution and governing-law clauses, and remedies for breach. Many also include arbitration, attorney-fee, and confidentiality provisions.
What happens if the other side breaches?
Your options depend on the contract and the harm: demand performance, negotiate a resolution, or sue for damages. A lawyer assesses the strength of the claim, the cost of pursuing it, and whether the contract shifts fees.
Are non-compete agreements enforceable?
Only when reasonable in duration, geography, and scope, and the rules vary by state. A lawyer can draft one likely to hold up, or evaluate whether one you have signed is enforceable.
Should disputes go to court or arbitration?
It often depends on a clause you agreed to when signing. Arbitration can be faster and private but limits appeals. Understand which applies before a dispute arises, because it changes strategy and cost.
How do I choose between the firms on this list?
Match the firm to the work. Routine drafting needs an efficient transactional lawyer; a high-stakes negotiation or a breach dispute needs a business litigator. Call two or three Irving-area firms and compare focus, fees, and responsiveness.
One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the profiles, check the credentials, and call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one how many matters like yours they have handled in Irving in the last three years. The answer tells you most of what you need to know. — The LawFirmSquare team
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