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Top 10 Medical Malpractice Lawyers in Frisco

Medical malpractice is a specialized, expert-driven practice, so most firms that handle Frisco cases are based across the Dallas–Collin County area. Texas sets a firm deadline to sue, requires an expert report early in the case, and caps noneconomic damages. These firms work on contingency and advance the substantial costs these cases require.

Choosing a medical malpractice lawyer matters, because Texas malpractice cases require expert medical testimony and significant resources. Below are Dallas-area and Collin County firms serving Frisco that appear consistently across Super Lawyers, Best Lawyers, Justia, Martindale-Hubbell, and FindLaw, with verifiable malpractice focus. Most offer a free consultation and have your records reviewed before taking a case.

How we picked these 8: We reviewed peer rankings (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Avvo, Martindale-Hubbell), bar recognition, and client review patterns across independent directories such as Justia, Avvo, Super Lawyers, Expertise.com, and FindLaw. Firms that appeared consistently across independent sources made the list. We do not accept payment for placement, and we do not write sponsored reviews. More on our methodology →

1

Van Wey, Metzler & Williams, PLLC

Dallas (serves Frisco) Boutique

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, birth injury, surgical errors, misdiagnosis

A medical malpractice-focused firm serving Collin County including Frisco; founding attorney Kay Van Wey has been recognized among the Best Lawyers in Dallas for over a decade and is listed in Super Lawyers.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →
2

The Schorr Law Firm, P.C.

Dallas (serves Frisco) Boutique

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, catastrophic injury, wrongful death

A Dallas firm whose attorney Geoffrey Schorr is recognized in Super Lawyers for medical malpractice and serves clients throughout the Frisco and Collin County area.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX
Request Free Consultation →
3

Ted B. Lyon & Associates

Mesquite (serves Frisco) Mid-size

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, catastrophic injury, wrongful death

An established North Texas trial firm handling medical malpractice and catastrophic-injury cases; its attorneys appear in Super Lawyers and Justia and serve the greater Dallas and Collin County region.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Mesquite, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →
4

GreeningLaw, P.C.

Addison (serves Frisco) Boutique

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, personal injury, wrongful death

A North Texas firm whose attorney Robert L. Greening is recognized in Super Lawyers for medical malpractice, serving injured patients in Frisco and the surrounding counties.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Addison, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →
5

The Turley Law Firm

Dallas (serves Frisco) Mid-size

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, catastrophic injury, wrongful death

A long-established Dallas trial firm; attorney Linda Turley is recognized in Super Lawyers and Best Lawyers for medical malpractice and represents Frisco-area clients in serious-injury cases.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX
Request Free Consultation →
6

Hastings Law Firm, P.C.

Dallas (serves Frisco) Mid-size

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, surgical errors, misdiagnosis, wrongful death

A medical malpractice-focused Texas firm representing injured patients in Frisco and throughout Collin County; profiled across Justia and FindLaw for healthcare-negligence cases.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →
7

The Law Offices of Reynolds & Reynolds, PLLC

Dallas (serves Frisco) Boutique

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, wrongful death

A results-driven Texas practice focused on medical malpractice serving McKinney, Frisco, Plano, Allen, and the rest of Collin County; listed in regional malpractice directories.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →
8

McKey Law Firm

Dallas (serves Frisco) Solo

Practice focus: Medical malpractice, personal injury

A North Texas firm founded by attorney Jeremy McKey, representing clients in medical malpractice and injury matters across Collin, Dallas, and Denton counties.

Fee structure
Contingency (TX caps apply)
Consultation
Free consultation
Office
Dallas, TX (serves Collin County)
Request Free Consultation →

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How to choose between them

Match the firm to the case. Medical malpractice is among the most expert-heavy and expensive areas of civil litigation in Texas, so you want a firm that handles these cases regularly, has physicians review records before filing, and can advance the cost of expert witnesses. A general personal injury practice is not the same as a dedicated malpractice team.

Ask how many malpractice cases the firm has taken to trial, who reviews your records, and how the contingency fee works against the Texas damages cap. Most of these firms are based in Dallas or elsewhere in Collin County and serve Frisco, which is normal for this specialized practice.

What to look for in a Medical Malpractice 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 medical malpractice cases in Frisco week in and week out, not one who takes them occasionally between unrelated matters. Recent, repeated experience with cases like yours is the single best predictor of a good outcome.

Straight talk about your case. A good lawyer tells you what is strong and what is weak in your situation at the first meeting, not just what you want to hear. If everything sounds easy and the outcome sounds guaranteed, be skeptical — real cases have real risks, and an honest lawyer names them.

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. The lawyer who appears in front of the Collin County courts and Texas medical-malpractice rules regularly knows how each one runs a proceeding, how local outcomes tend to break, and which resolutions are realistic. That practical knowledge is hard to fake and easy to verify — just ask.

What a medical malpractice case looks like in Frisco

A Frisco-area malpractice case is filed in the Collin County district courts. Texas law (Chapter 74 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code) requires the plaintiff to serve a qualified expert report within 120 days of filing suit, and failing to do so can end the case. There is also a pre-suit notice requirement before filing. Nearly every case turns on expert testimony to establish the standard of care and how a provider fell short, so reputable firms have an independent physician review your records early.

Texas generally requires a malpractice suit within two years of the negligent act or treatment, with limited exceptions. Damages split into two parts: your economic losses such as medical bills, lost income, and future care, and noneconomic damages for pain and suffering, which Texas caps. These cases are document- and expert-intensive and often take one to several years.

What does a medical malpractice lawyer in Frisco cost?

Texas medical malpractice cases are handled on contingency, so there is no up-front fee and the attorney is paid only if you recover. Because the cases require expert review and testimony, the firm typically advances significant costs and is reimbursed from any recovery, which is one reason these firms are selective about the cases they take.

Texas caps noneconomic damages such as pain and suffering — generally $250,000 against physicians and individual providers, with a separate limit for healthcare institutions and an overall ceiling when multiple defendants are involved. Your economic damages are not subject to that cap. A good lawyer explains how the cap affects the realistic value of your case at the first meeting.

Red flags to watch for

Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can promise a specific result. If a firm guarantees how your medical malpractice 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 consultation. Use it, take notes, and compare at least two firms before you sign.

  1. Who, specifically, will handle my case day to day? Get a name and an email, not just a firm brand.
  2. How many cases like mine have you handled in the last three years? You want a number, not a brochure line.
  3. What is your fee, and what does it cover? Get the answer in writing before you sign anything.
  4. What costs am I responsible for, and when? Out-of-pocket expenses surprise people. Ask up front.
  5. What is the realistic range of outcomes here? A good lawyer gives you a range. A weak one promises the high end.
  6. How long will this take? Ask for an honest estimate with the assumptions stated.
  7. Who else might work on this — associates, paralegals, experts? Know who is actually on your team.
  8. How and how often will I hear from you? Set the communication expectation now, not later.
  9. What is the worst-case outcome? A lawyer who will not discuss downside risk is selling you something.
  10. 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 Frisco

The expert-report rule. Texas requires a qualified medical expert report within 120 days of filing a malpractice suit. It is a strict, case-ending requirement, which is why firms vet records carefully before filing.

The damages cap. Texas caps noneconomic damages for pain and suffering — generally $250,000 against physicians, with a separate limit for healthcare institutions — while economic losses such as bills and lost wages are not capped.

A two-year deadline. Texas generally requires a malpractice claim within two years of the negligent treatment, with limited exceptions, so it is important to consult a lawyer early.

Your first steps this week

If you are dealing with a medical malpractice issue in Frisco 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. Memories fade and 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, text messages, photos, and bills connected to your situation in one place. The strength of a medical malpractice case 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 an insurer, the other side, or a fast-talking intake person, you are allowed to say you want to speak with your own lawyer first. A reputable Frisco firm respects that; anyone who does not is telling you something.

Book two consultations. Most firms above offer a free first meeting. Talk to at least two before you commit, and choose the lawyer who explains your options clearly and answers your questions without rushing you.

Talk to a Frisco medical malpractice lawyer — free, no obligation

Tell us what is going on. We'll match you with vetted Frisco firms from the list above. Most respond within one business day.

Frequently asked questions

Do I have a medical malpractice case in Frisco?

You may have a case if a provider's care fell below the accepted standard and that failure directly caused you a real injury or loss. Not every bad outcome is malpractice. Most firms offer a free consultation and have a physician review your records first.

How much does a medical malpractice lawyer cost?

These cases are taken on contingency — no up-front fee, and the attorney is paid only if you recover. Because expert review and testimony are required, the firm typically advances case costs and is reimbursed from any recovery. Ask how costs are handled if the case does not succeed.

What is the deadline to file in Texas?

Texas generally requires a malpractice suit within two years of the negligent act or treatment, with limited exceptions. Missing the deadline usually bars the claim, so consult a lawyer early.

What is the expert-report requirement?

Texas law requires you to serve a qualified expert report within 120 days of filing a malpractice suit, describing how the provider breached the standard of care and caused harm. Failing to do so can result in dismissal, which is why firms vet records before filing.

How much can I recover under the Texas cap?

Your economic damages such as medical bills, lost income, and future care are not capped. Noneconomic damages for pain and suffering are capped — generally $250,000 against physicians and individual providers, with a separate limit for healthcare institutions and an overall ceiling when multiple defendants are involved.

Which court will my case be filed in?

A Frisco-area malpractice case is filed in the Collin County district courts, since Frisco lies primarily in Collin County.

Do I need a medical expert to prove my case?

Almost always, yes. Texas requires qualified expert testimony to establish the standard of care and how the provider deviated from it, and reputable firms have your records reviewed by an independent physician early.

How long does a medical malpractice case take?

It varies widely. Many take one to several years depending on complexity, the number of defendants, expert review, and whether the case settles or goes to trial.

What kinds of cases count as medical malpractice?

Common examples include misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis, surgical errors, birth injuries, medication and anesthesia errors, hospital or nursing negligence, failure to obtain informed consent, and wrongful death from negligent care.

What should I do if I suspect malpractice?

Preserve all medical records and bills, write down what happened while it is fresh, avoid signing anything from the provider or insurer, and contact a malpractice attorney quickly because of the strict deadline and expert-report rule. The first consultation is typically free.

One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the reviews. Call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one how many cases like yours they have handled in Frisco in the last three years. The answer tells you most of what you need to know. — The LawFirmSquare team