Service
A website for an attorney or law firm
Lawyer profiles with experience and specialization, a structured list of services, closed cases, a consultation booking form, and a legal blog for SEO. From project start to the first lead from the site — 3–5 weeks.
What's included
What a client checks before the first call — all of it on the site
A lawyer's prospective client is someone in a difficult situation. Before calling, they check: who is this specialist, what cases have they handled, how much does a consultation cost. The site has to answer that
- Specialist profiles. Photo, specialization (family, criminal, corporate law), years of practice, education, bar association membership. People choose a lawyer, not a firm.
- Practice and case studies. Closed cases with the task and the outcome described. No client names — confidentiality — but with specifics: "secured a reduced sentence," "recovered the property."
- List of services. A structured list: civil law, divorce and property division, corporate, criminal, notary services. Prices — if they're fixed; if not, "price after consultation" and a booking form.
- A consultation booking form. Name, phone or Telegram, a brief note on the matter. The lead arrives in Telegram or by email.
- A blog with articles. Answers to common questions ("How to divide property in a divorce," "What to do if you're detained on the street") — a legal SEO standard and a trust signal for Google.
- Reviews. Google Maps or a form on the site — real client reviews, not marketing copy.
- Contacts with a map. Office address, phone, Telegram, email — all without a "submit a request" wall.
Case studies
Legal sites where the client books on their own, without waiting for an email reply
How we work
How we build a legal practice website
Brief — 30 minutes
We work through: how many lawyers, what specialization, whether there's a brand book, whether you need a blog. Deliverable: a sitemap plus a rough budget.
Design
A restrained, "solid" aesthetic. No loud banners, no stock photos of handshakes. UI mockups for desktop and mobile. Deliverable: approved mockups plus a fixed price.
Development
Lawyer profiles, case studies, blog, booking form, SEO setup. Weekly deploys to staging. Deliverable: a finished site on staging plus every functional section.
Launch
SEO setup, Google Business Profile, analytics connection. Admin guide (publishing articles, updating case studies). Deliverable: a live site plus a video guide plus 30 days of free support.
FAQ
Common questions from law firms
Let's talk
Tell us about your practice — we'll propose a site structure
- 30 minutesOne-on-one online
- Flexible formatVideo or phone call
- Solution-focusedPractical answers

More detail
An attorney's website and law firm site: why trust matters more than "good design"
An attorney's or law firm's website is first of all a trust instrument. The prospective client arrives with a problem: a divorce, a criminal case, a corporate dispute. Before the first call, they check: who is this lawyer, what cases have they handled, how to reach them. The site has to answer each of these questions — effortlessly.
The specialist profile is the foundation of a legal site. Photo, specialization, years of practice, education, bar association membership — this isn't an "about us" page, it's the argument for why this particular person will solve the task. We structure the profile so a client can tell in 30 seconds whether this lawyer handles their type of case.
Case studies are the second most important element. Not "we provide services in family law," but "27 property-division cases in the past year, 23 in the client's favor." No names — confidentiality is kept, but the specifics are there. We help present cases correctly: the client's task, what was done, the result.
A blog is a legal SEO standard and a channel of its own. People search for answers on Google ("What to do if you're detained on the street," "How to split an apartment in a divorce") — and find your article. That's free traffic from people with an urgent need. Google judges legal content by E-E-A-T: an article bylined by a real lawyer with stated experience and specialization is a direct authority signal. The first articles can be prepared alongside the launch. Legal copywriting →
The aesthetic of a legal site: restrained, solid, no "First consultation free!" banners, no stock photos of handshakes. A monochrome or muted palette, clear typography, minimal hype. A client looking for a lawyer in a crisis doesn't want a "flashy landing page" — they want to understand whether you can be trusted. In this niche, restraint sells better than creativity.
Local search for an attorney is a separate matter. Google Business Profile, client reviews, local meta tags — all of it gives visibility for queries like "lawyer near me," "attorney in the city." More on local SEO on a dedicated page. Local SEO →
Timelines: a basic attorney's site — 2–3 weeks, a standard one with a blog and case studies — 3–5 weeks, an extended one with a calculator and payment — 5–7 weeks. Estimate your option with the calculator or book a call →





