Bennett & Belfort, P.C.
Practice focus: Business contracts, employment
Experienced MA contract drafting + litigation boutique.
- Fee structure
- Flat + hourly
- Free consultation
- Paid
The contract you sign today is the case you fight tomorrow.
A Boston business contract is rarely just paperwork. From biotech licensing to academic technology transfers to commercial leases, the right Boston contract lawyer drafts to prevent disputes and litigates to win them when they happen.
These 10 Boston firms cover the full life cycle of business contracts.
How we picked these 10: We reviewed published verdicts and settlements, peer rankings (Best Lawyers, Super Lawyers, Chambers and Partners, Avvo), client review patterns, and bar association recognition. 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 →
Practice focus: Business contracts, employment
Experienced MA contract drafting + litigation boutique.
Practice focus: Commercial contracts, business law
200+ years combined experience. Strong contracts bench.
Practice focus: Business contracts, employment, NDAs
Award-winning 'Best Business Lawyers in Boston.'
Practice focus: Commercial contracts, business litigation
Alan Rose — Bet-the-Company Litigation. 70+ years collective experience.
Practice focus: Business contracts, business litigation
Travis Jacobs — Super Lawyers Rising Star 6 consecutive years.
Practice focus: Business contracts, employment, real estate
Multi-practice Boston firm with strong commercial contracts.
Practice focus: Business contracts, formation
Boston-area boutique with strong contract drafting + review.
Practice focus: Business contracts, real estate, M&A
Long-established Boston firm with strong commercial contracts practice.
Practice focus: Commercial contracts, M&A, finance
Major Boston firm with strong commercial transactional practice.
Practice focus: Commercial contracts, IP, restructuring
Major Boston firm with broad commercial contracts and litigation practice.
Tell us about your situation and we'll match you with vetted contract drafting and review attorneys in Boston. Free, confidential, no obligation.
Request Free Consultation →Simple review: 2-5 days. Drafting from scratch: 1-3 weeks. Litigation in Suffolk Superior Court 12-24 months.
Hourly $300-$700 for partners. Flat fees of $400-$2,000 standard documents.
The legal directory you find on Google has thousands of Boston contract drafting and review firms. Most are competent. A few are problematic. The patterns to avoid:
Guaranteed outcomes. No ethical attorney can guarantee a result. If a firm promises a specific recovery, dismissal, or visa approval, walk away.
The disappearing partner. You meet a senior partner at intake, then never speak to them again. The case is handled by an unsupervised junior or a paralegal. Ask in writing who will be your day-to-day attorney.
Pressure to sign immediately. Reputable firms give you the retainer in writing, time to read it, and the option to take it home. High-pressure intake is almost always a sign of a volume mill, not a craftsperson's practice.
No verifiable track record. The firm should be able to point to verdicts, settlements, peer rankings, or bar association recognition. "We've helped thousands of clients" is marketing copy. Specific numbers, named cases, and third-party rankings are evidence.
Vague fee terms. "Don't worry about cost" is a red flag. Every legitimate Boston lawyer will give you a written engagement letter with the fee structure, what's covered, what triggers extra charges, and what happens if you fire them.
Most Boston firms on this list offer a free initial consultation. Use it. Bring a list of questions and write down the answers. Compare across at least two firms before you sign.
Boston is its own market. The procedure, the courts, and the strategy are city- and state-specific in ways that matter to your outcome.
Local courthouses matter. Suffolk County Superior Court at the Edward W. Brooke Courthouse and the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts have judges, calendars, and procedures that shape how cases move. A firm that knows the local courthouse has an advantage.
Filing deadlines are strict. Notice of Claim windows for cases against the City or County, Statute of Limitations periods, and pre-suit certification requirements vary by case type and are unforgiving. A missed deadline often means a lost case — full stop.
Local procedure rules matter. Each court has its own forms, motion practice, and judge preferences. The right Boston firm will know not just the law, but the unwritten rules of the courthouse you'll be in.
Local plaintiffs/defendants do well in front of local juries. Verdict patterns vary by venue, and a trial-capable firm uses venue strategically.
High-stakes contracts — yes.
MA statute: 6 years written, 6 years oral.
Risk-shifting; often most negotiated.
MA Noncompetition Agreement Act limits enforceability significantly.
Functionally identical.
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 mine have you taken to verdict in the last three years? The answer tells you everything. — The LawFirmSquare team