Websites for real estate attorneys — all 50 states
Real Estate Law lawyer website design
Real estate clients come in two distinct moods, and the site has to serve both. The transactional client — a buyer two weeks from closing, a seller who just got a contract — is shopping on speed and price, and wants to see fees and turnaround immediately. The dispute client — a boundary fight, a deal that fell apart, a contractor who walked — is stressed and wants a litigator. A homepage that lumps both into one vague paragraph converts neither. Clear paths for each, inside five seconds.
What's actually at stake.
The economics span a wide range: residential closings are modest flat fees won on volume and referral flow, while commercial transactions, title disputes, and construction litigation can be substantial engagements. Much of the residential pipeline runs through agents, lenders, and title companies who check your website before referring — a dated site quietly chokes that channel. Search competition is moderate compared to injury law, which makes real estate one of the niches where a well-built site can still reach page one on a normal budget. Firms in attorney-closing states face the most direct competition; everywhere else, the dispute and commercial keywords are the prize.
Built for real estate attorneys
Five things your site gets that a generic build never will.
- 01
Separate transactional and litigation tracks
Distinct sections for closings and contract review versus disputes and litigation, each with its own navigation path, copy, and intake. The buyer at closing and the neighbor in a boundary war should never see the same page.
- 02
Flat-fee closing pricing page
If you publish closing fees, we present them cleanly with what is included; if you prefer ranges, we structure that too. Transactional clients comparison-shop, and firms that show pricing win those calls.
- 03
Referral-partner page for agents and lenders
A page built for the professionals who send you closings — turnaround commitments, communication process, and an easy way to start a file. It gives agents a link to send their clients.
- 04
Transaction-type and property-type pages
Pages for residential closings, commercial purchases, leasing, 1031 considerations, HOA disputes, and title issues, so the site catches the specific thing the client is dealing with.
- 05
Document and process explainers
Plain-language walkthroughs of what happens at closing, what title insurance covers, and what to do when a buyer breaches. This content earns rankings and pre-sells your competence.
How real estate attorneys get found on Google.
Real estate legal search is heavily local and task-specific. Typical queries: "real estate attorney near me for closing", "how much does a real estate lawyer cost for closing", "property line dispute lawyer", and "lawyer to review purchase contract". In attorney-closing states the transactional terms carry serious volume; elsewhere, disputes and commercial work dominate. Cost questions appear constantly, which is why pages that address fees honestly tend to rank and convert. City-level pages matter because closings are hyperlocal, and process explainers — what title work involves, closing timelines — earn the rankings that generic service pages cannot.
Straight answers
Real Estate Law attorneys ask us.
Should we publish our closing fees on the site?
If your fees are competitive, usually yes — transactional clients are comparison shopping and a clear price wins calls. If your pricing varies, we can publish ranges or a starting-at figure so you stay in the consideration set without boxing yourself in.
Can the site support our referral relationships with agents?
Yes, and it should. We build a dedicated page agents and lenders can bookmark and send to clients, which makes referring you the path of least resistance and reinforces the relationship every time it is used.
How long does the build take if we have a closing season coming?
A typical build runs several weeks from kickoff to launch, content included. If you have a spring market deadline, tell us at the start and we sequence the transactional pages first so the highest-traffic section can go live early.
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