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The Best Firms Still Charge the Most

For high-end legal work, firms remain in the driver's seat over hourly rates.

By Leigh Jones Contact All Articles 

The National Law Journal

December 18, 2012

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Credit: Ozgur Artug/Fotolia

Credit: Ozgur Artug/Fotolia

The 2012 Law Firm Billing Survey


Big-firm lawyers still have a sweet deal. Top partners at major law firms continue to command premium hourly prices for their services.

The National Law Journal sampled 55 law firms from among the NLJ 350 — our survey of the nation's largest law firms by headcount — about the prices their lawyers are charging clients by the hour. The responding firms ranged in size from 128 to 3,746 attorneys.

Among our findings: The highest rate was $1,285, charged by a single real estate investment trust partner in Locke Lord's Dallas office, Bryan Goolsby, according to a spokeswoman at the 540-attorney firm. The lowest hourly rate for associates was $130 at Cincinnati-based Dinsmore & Shohl.

The median billing rate in 2012 was $432 at law firms surveyed by the NLJ that participated both last year and this year. Median partner rates were $517, a 4.5 percent increase from last year, and the median associate rate was $323, a 3.5 percent increase.

The higher prices increasingly serve as a mere asking price or suggestion, according to law firm consultants. While some clients are digging deeper into their pockets and paying the increases, many others drive harder bargains by demanding discounts and alternative fee arrangements.

"Since the recession, clients have been vocal and effective," said Mark Silow, managing partner of Philadelphia-based Fox Rothschild. The median hourly rate at his firm in 2012 was $435, a number close to the $432 median in our survey. Silow said the rates at his firm are "highly competitive."

Fox Rothschild attorneys receive significant pushback from clients when it's time for rate increases, Silow said, but clients aren't "scientific" about identifying where, exactly, to trim expenses. "They kind of take a shotgun approach," he said.

ROOM TO HAGGLE

Driving the uptick is what consultant Ward Bower calls a "car dealership sticker price" phenomenon. Law firms are upping their asking price to gain room to haggle. The wider margin gives clients the feeling they're getting a better deal.

"Law firms are negotiating downward," said Bower, of Altman Weil. "Many of them aren't charging the quoted rates with these kinds of increases."

For high-end legal work, law firms remain in the driver's seat, said Kent Zimmermann, a consultant with Zeughauser Group. Because clients will always need highly skilled, talented lawyers to handle their most sensitive matters, the increases at that end of the spectrum are pushing up the overall averages, he said. Attorneys who can charge the highest rates usually practice in white-collar defense, mergers and acquisitions, high-end corporate finance and securities and big-ticket litigation.

"The client always has more leverage but certainly, for the high-end work, the firm is calling the shots," Zimmermann said.

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Firms mentioned

    
  • Dinsmore & Shohl
  • Fox Rothschild
  • Locke Lord

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • ALM Legal Intelligence
  • NLJ
  • Billing
  • Joel Henning & Associates
  • Zeughauser Group

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  • Corporate & Business Law

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