Websites for family law attorneys — all 50 states
Family Law lawyer website design
A family law search rarely happens once. The person thinking about divorce searches quietly for weeks, often from a phone in a parked car or after the house is asleep, reading about custody, money, and what the process actually looks like before they can say it out loud. By the time they contact a firm, they have compared several sites. In the first five seconds, yours has to feel calm, competent, and discreet. Anything that feels aggressive or salesy reads as one more thing to be afraid of.
What's actually at stake.
Family law engagements are long and substantial. A contested divorce or custody matter can mean many months of billed work, and the client relationship often produces referrals for years, which is why divorce-related keywords are among the more expensive terms in local legal advertising. The shopping behavior raises the stakes further: family clients commonly compare three to five firms before reaching out, and the website is the comparison. They also arrive by referral, a name from a friend or a therapist, and then check the site before calling, so a weak site quietly kills referred business too. The firm that looks composed and explains the process clearly wins the consult, and the consult is most of the sale.
Built for family law attorneys
Five things your site gets that a generic build never will.
- 01
Matter-specific pages
Dedicated pages for divorce, child custody, child support, spousal support, property division, and adoption. Each one answers the questions specific to that matter instead of forcing everything through one "family law" page.
- 02
Confidential intake by design
A short private consultation form, clear confidentiality language, and contact options that do not require a phone call. Many family law visitors literally cannot talk where they are.
- 03
Process explainers for your state
Plain-English walkthroughs of how divorce and custody actually work locally: filing, timelines, mediation, what a first hearing is like. This is what people read for weeks before they call anyone.
- 04
Bios that read like humans
Attorney pages with real photography and warm, factual writing. Family clients are choosing a person to sit beside them through the worst year of their life, and the bio page is where that decision happens.
- 05
Reviews handled with care
A review strategy built around Google reviews and consent-based, anonymized client stories, written to your state's testimonial rules. Family clients value privacy, and the site has to show social proof without violating it.
How family law attorneys get found on Google.
Family law search has a long research phase, and that is the opening. People type "divorce lawyer near me" when they are ready, but for weeks before that they search "how much does a divorce cost in [state]," "can I get full custody," and "do I have to pay alimony." Question-and-answer content for those queries earns rankings and quietly introduces your firm before the hiring search ever happens. Local intent governs the hiring moment, so matter pages tied to your city and county, plus a maintained business profile, do the converting work.
Straight answers
Family Law attorneys ask us.
Our clients are private. How do we show reviews and testimonials?
Google reviews are the workhorse, since clients post those themselves and many will when asked at the right moment. On the site itself we use consent-based stories, anonymized where appropriate, written to your state's testimonial and advertising rules. Nothing identifying goes up without the client's sign-off.
Should we publish our consultation fee on the site?
Usually yes. Family law shoppers compare firms, and an unanswered fee question is a reason to pick the firm that answered it. If you charge for consults, stating the fee filters out non-serious inquiries; if the first call is free, saying so plainly increases calls.
What content does a family law site actually need beyond a homepage?
Matter pages for divorce, custody, and support at minimum, real attorney bios, and a set of process explainers for your state. The explainers matter more in family law than almost any niche because clients research for weeks before contacting anyone. A site with only a homepage and a contact form loses that entire audience.
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