Corporate Lawyer in Dallas
Corporate lawyers handle the legal structure of doing business: forming LLCs and corporations, agreements between founders and partners, contracts with customers and vendors, equity and stock option plans, fundraising rounds, and the diligence and paperwork of buying or selling a company. Most of the value is preventive — a clean cap table, a signed founder agreement with vesting, and IP assignment clauses cost little at the start and prevent the disputes that kill companies later. This is a different discipline from litigation: a corporate lawyer's job is to structure deals and relationships so you never need a courtroom. Good ones are also honest about calibration — a two-person startup doesn't need a law firm on retainer, but it does need a handful of documents done correctly at the moments they matter.
The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex is one of the fastest-growing metro areas in the US, with a corporate relocation boom that drives steady demand for business, employment, and real estate legal work.
Corporate Lawyers in Dallas
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Browse all lawyersWhen to hire a corporate lawyer
The pattern that costs founders the most is signing first and asking later. Get a lawyer's eyes on anything that allocates ownership or long-term obligations before you sign: a term sheet from an investor, a cofounder split, an operating agreement someone else drafted, a commercial lease, or an acquisition offer. Other concrete triggers: hiring your first employee (offer letters, IP assignment), issuing equity or options, taking money from anyone — friends and family included — and any transaction where the other side has counsel and you don't. Formation itself is cheap to do right and tedious to fix retroactively.
Common matters they handle
- Entity formation and founder agreements
- Operating agreements, bylaws, and governance
- Commercial contracts and terms of service
- Equity plans, SAFEs, and fundraising rounds
- Mergers, acquisitions, and business sales
- Regulatory and compliance questions
Corporate Lawyer FAQ
Do I really need a lawyer to form an LLC or corporation?
For a single-owner business with no investors, online formation is often fine. The calculus changes the moment there's a second owner, outside money, or meaningful IP: default state rules rarely match what partners actually intend, and a formation lawyer's real product is the operating agreement or bylaws — who decides what, what happens if someone leaves, how equity vests. Those are the documents disputes get fought over.
How do corporate lawyers charge?
A mix: flat fees for defined packages (formation, standard financing documents), hourly for negotiation and bespoke work, and monthly outside-counsel arrangements for ongoing needs. For startups, ask whether the firm offers deferred fees or startup packages. Whatever the structure, ask for the fee model in writing before work starts and what triggers a change from flat to hourly.
What's the difference between an LLC and a corporation?
Broadly: LLCs offer flexible management and pass-through taxation with less formality, which suits most small businesses. C-corporations suit companies raising venture capital — investors expect standardized stock, and option plans are cleaner. S-corporation status is a tax election with ownership restrictions. The right answer depends on your investors, tax picture, and exit plans, which is a short consultation rather than a guess.
What should I have ready before a fundraising or sale conversation?
The things diligence will ask for: formation documents, a clean capitalization table, signed IP assignments from everyone who built the product, key customer and employment contracts, and financials. Gaps here — an ex-cofounder who never assigned IP, handshake equity promises — surface at the worst moment and cost leverage. A pre-diligence cleanup with a lawyer is far cheaper before a term sheet than after.
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