Buying, selling, or fighting over property in Glendale?

Top 7 Real Estate Lawyers in Glendale, AZ

A real estate matter — a purchase or sale, a title problem, a boundary or easement dispute, or a landlord-tenant fight — turns on documents and deadlines that are easy to get wrong. In Glendale, the right attorney protects the deal or your position before a small issue becomes an expensive one. The firms below have a verifiable Glendale-area real estate practice.

Choosing a real estate lawyer is about matching the firm to the matter — a residential closing, a commercial transaction, a title or boundary dispute, or landlord-tenant litigation each call for different strengths. The Glendale-area firms and attorneys below appear across independent directories such as Super Lawyers, Justia, Avvo, Martindale-Hubbell, and Expertise.com, with verifiable real estate focus.

How we picked these 7: We reviewed peer rankings and directory listings (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Avvo, Justia, Martindale-Hubbell, Expertise.com), bar recognition, and verifiable practice focus. 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

Saal and Plaskett, PLLC

Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Residential and commercial real estate

A Glendale real estate firm handling residential and commercial transactions and disputes, noted for transparent, itemized billing.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Glendale, AZ
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2

Martinez Law, P.L.C.

Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Real estate disputes, foreclosure defense

A boutique real estate firm founded by Adam D. Martinez handling foreclosures, deficiency defense, easement and property-use disputes, and landlord-tenant matters.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Glendale, AZ
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3

Degnan Law

Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Real estate transactions and disputes

A firm providing real estate representation to Glendale-area clients on transactions, title issues, and property disputes.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Glendale, AZ
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4

Zazueta Law, PLLC

Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Real estate and business law

A Glendale-area firm representing clients in real estate transactions and related business and contract matters.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Glendale, AZ
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5

Jennings, Strouss & Salmon, P.L.C.

Serving Glendale Full-service

Practice focus: Commercial real estate

A long-established Arizona firm whose real estate attorneys handle commercial transactions, development, and disputes for Glendale-area clients.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Phoenix, AZ (serving Glendale)
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6

Kadish Associates Law Group

Serving Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Real estate transactions and litigation

An Arizona firm handling real estate transactions and litigation, including title and property disputes, for clients in the Glendale area.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Phoenix, AZ (serving Glendale)
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7

Perez Law Group, PLLC

Serving Glendale Boutique

Practice focus: Real estate, business, estate

A Phoenix-area firm whose attorneys handle real estate matters alongside business and estate planning for Glendale-area clients.

Fee structure
Hourly
Consultation
Consultation
Office
Phoenix metro (serving Glendale)
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How to choose between them

Match the firm to the matter. A straightforward real estate matter is often a flat-fee or limited-scope engagement, while a contested or complex one needs a firm with depth, support staff, and real negotiating or courtroom experience. Start by being honest about which kind of matter you actually have, because that single distinction narrows the list faster than anything else.

Then compare the 7 firms above on the things that genuinely predict a good experience: relevant recent experience, clear written fees, responsive communication, and a named lawyer who will own your file. Two short consultations will tell you more than a week of reading reviews, because you will hear how each lawyer thinks about your specific situation and whether they explain it in plain language or hide behind jargon.

Finally, weigh fit. The most credentialed firm is not automatically the right one for you; the right one is the firm whose approach, communication style, and fee structure match what you need. Trust the lawyer who answers your questions directly and sets realistic expectations over the one who simply tells you what you want to hear.

What a real estate matter looks like in Glendale

Much real estate work in Glendale is transactional — reviewing a purchase contract, clearing title, handling a closing, or drafting a lease. The lawyer's job is to make sure the paperwork protects you, the title is clean, and the deadlines in the contract are met before money changes hands.

When a dispute arises — a title defect, an easement or boundary disagreement, an earnest-money fight, or a landlord-tenant problem — the work becomes a negotiation and, if needed, litigation in the Maricopa County Superior Court. Most disputes settle once the documents and the survey are on the table, which is exactly why careful review at the transaction stage pays off.

What to look for in a real estate 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 real estate matters in Glendale regularly, not one who takes them occasionally between unrelated cases. Recent, repeated 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.

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 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 Glendale regularly knows the local courts, agencies, and counterparts, knows how matters there tend to break, and knows which outcomes are realistic. That practical knowledge is hard to fake and easy to verify — just ask.

What does a real estate lawyer in Glendale cost?

A residential real estate matter in Glendale — a contract review, a closing question, or a simple title issue — is often handled on a flat or limited hourly basis, commonly a few hundred dollars to a couple thousand. Commercial transactions and real estate litigation are billed hourly, typically $250 to $450 an hour, with the total driven by complexity.

What runs up the cost is conflict and complexity: a clean transaction is inexpensive, while a contested boundary, title, or contract dispute that reaches the Maricopa County Superior Court is not. A good lawyer scopes the likely range early and tells you when paying for review now avoids a far larger bill later.

Red flags to watch for

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

  1. Who, specifically, will handle my matter day to day? Get a name and an email, not just a firm brand.
  2. How many matters 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 real estate in Arizona

Title and escrow. Arizona transactions run through title and escrow companies, and most issues that blow up a deal show up first in the title commitment. A Glendale lawyer reads it closely before you are committed.

Deficiency and foreclosure rules. Arizona has specific anti-deficiency and trustee-sale rules that affect homeowners and investors. Local counsel who knows these protects your position in a distressed property.

Local courts and counterparts. A lawyer who handles property matters in the Maricopa County courts and deals with area title companies knows how disputes there tend to resolve and what a realistic outcome looks like.

When to bring in a real estate lawyer

Earlier is almost always better. People often wait until a real estate matter has hardened into a crisis — a deadline, a lawsuit, an official notice — before calling a lawyer, and by then some of the best options have already closed. A short, early consultation costs little and frequently changes the trajectory of a matter, while waiting rarely makes anything cheaper or simpler.

You do not need to have everything figured out before you call. A good Glendale lawyer expects you to arrive with questions, not answers, and part of their job is to tell you whether you even need them. If your situation is simple, an honest firm will say so; if it is not, you will be glad you asked before acting rather than after.

If you are weighing whether to call now or wait, treat any hard deadline, any document you are asked to sign, or any official notice as a reason to talk to someone this week. The cost of a brief consultation is small next to the cost of a missed deadline or a signature you cannot take back.

Your first steps this week

If you are dealing with a real estate issue in Glendale 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, and records connected to your situation in one place. The strength of a real estate 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 intake person, you are allowed to say you want to speak with your own lawyer first. A reputable Glendale 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 lawyer who explains your options clearly and answers your questions without rushing you.

Talk to a Glendale real estate lawyer — free, no obligation

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

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a real estate lawyer in Arizona to buy a house?

Arizona does not require one for a typical residential closing, which runs through a title and escrow company. But a lawyer is worth it for contract questions, unusual terms, title problems, or any dispute.

What does a real estate lawyer in Glendale cost?

Residential matters are often a flat or limited hourly fee — a few hundred dollars to a couple thousand. Commercial work and litigation are hourly, typically $250 to $450 an hour. Ask for a written scope.

What does a real estate lawyer actually do?

Depending on the matter: review or draft contracts and leases, clear title, handle closings, and represent you in boundary, easement, title, earnest-money, or landlord-tenant disputes.

What is a title defect?

A problem in the chain of ownership — a lien, an old claim, a missing signature — that can cloud your ownership. A lawyer helps resolve it before or after closing.

Can a lawyer help with a boundary or easement dispute?

Yes. These turn on the deed, the survey, and Arizona property law, and a real estate lawyer can negotiate a resolution or litigate if needed.

What about landlord-tenant problems?

Real estate and litigation attorneys handle evictions, lease disputes, and deposit issues under Arizona's residential landlord-tenant act for both owners and tenants.

How long does a real estate dispute take?

An early settlement can resolve in weeks; a contested case in the Maricopa County Superior Court can take many months, depending on the issues and the court's calendar.

Should I have a lawyer review my contract before I sign?

For anything beyond a routine residential deal — commercial property, seller financing, unusual contingencies — yes. A short review is cheap next to a bad term you are bound to.

Do real estate lawyers offer free consultations?

Many offer a short initial consultation. Use it to confirm the lawyer handles your type of matter and to get the fee in writing.

What should I bring to the first meeting?

The contract, deed, survey, title commitment, lease, or notices connected to your matter, plus a short summary of what you want to happen.

One last thing. Choosing a lawyer is personal. Read the listings, check the bar record, and call two or three firms before you sign. Ask each one how many matters like yours they have handled in Glendale in the last three years. The answer tells you most of what you need to know. — The LawFirmSquare team