Understanding Legal Fees and Costs
Few things make people hesitate to call a lawyer more than the fear of an open-ended bill. The good news: legal fees follow a handful of predictable patterns. Once you know them, you can ask the right questions and avoid surprises. Here is what busy New Jersey clients need to know.
The Main Fee Structures
Most legal work falls into one of these models:
- Hourly: You pay for time spent, billed in fractions of an hour. Common in litigation, business matters, and complex family cases where the scope is hard to predict.
- Flat fee: One set price for a defined task, such as a simple will, a name change, or a routine real estate closing. Predictable and easy to budget.
- Contingency: The lawyer is paid a percentage only if you recover money, common in personal injury cases. If there is no recovery, you typically owe no attorney fee, though costs may still apply.
Retainers, Explained
A retainer is an upfront deposit you pay before work begins. For hourly matters, the lawyer bills against it as they work and may ask you to replenish it. A retainer is usually not the total cost; it is a starting balance. Always ask whether unused retainer funds are refundable.
Costs Are Different From Fees
Attorney fees pay for the lawyer’s time. Costs are separate out-of-pocket expenses passed through to you, such as court filing fees, deposition transcripts, expert witnesses, and records requests. In some matters these add up, so ask for an estimate of likely costs in addition to the fee.
Get the Agreement in Writing
New Jersey attorneys generally provide a written fee agreement that spells out the structure, rate, and scope. Read it before signing. A clear agreement protects both sides and gives you something to point to if a question comes up later. If anything is ambiguous, ask for it to be clarified in writing.
Questions That Save You Money
Before you sign, ask:
- How are you billed, and what is the rate or percentage?
- What does a matter like mine typically cost, start to finish?
- Which costs are separate, and who pays them?
- Who does the work, and is junior staff billed at a lower rate?
- How and how often will I be invoiced?
Cheaper Is Not Always Smarter
The lowest quote can become the most expensive option if the work has to be redone or the matter drags. Weigh fee structure against experience and responsiveness. A fair price from someone who handles your issue efficiently usually beats a bargain rate that comes with delays. For help comparing candidates overall, see how to choose the right lawyer and the questions to ask before hiring.