Law firm website design
$3,500 flat, 21 days, WordPress you own. The one-time build at the center of this comparison.
FindLaw is really two things wearing one logo. There's the FindLaw directory, the consumer site with legal guides and an attorney listing, which has genuine value for some firms. And there's the FindLaw website, a subscription where you pay monthly and stop owning it the day you stop paying. Those two products deserve two different decisions. In 2024 the whole company changed hands, from Thomson Reuters to Internet Brands, which is a fair reminder that anything you don't own can shift under you. FirmForte only does the second piece, and it does it the opposite way: a one-time build on WordPress, the domain in your name, the site yours to keep. Keep the FindLaw listing if it's pulling its weight. Just think twice before you rent the website.
Most "FindLaw vs" pages treat the whole thing as one bad decision. That's lazy, and a lawyer can smell it. The listing and the website are separate purchases that happen to share a sales rep. Judge them separately.
FindLaw doesn't publish a price sheet, so the figures and contract terms here come from third-party reviews and firms reporting their own experiences, not from FindLaw. Terms vary and change, especially after the 2024 ownership change. Read your own agreement. The point that holds: the listing is a thing you rent and benefit from; the website is a thing you should probably own.
FirmForte is a small shop that builds and hands over. FindLaw is a large platform that hosts, lists, and bills monthly. Different tools for different firms. Here's the honest split.
This table is about the website product, not the directory listing. Where FindLaw doesn't publish a number, it's marked reported. FirmForte's column is what's on the pricing page.
| Feature | FirmForte | FindLaw (website) |
|---|---|---|
| Payment model | One-time build ($3,500), optional monthly retainer if you want ongoing work | Monthly subscription with no end; stop paying and the site goes away |
| Entry cost | $3,500 once | Low monthly to start; reported paid plans range roughly $250 to $2,000+ per month |
| Pricing transparency | Four tiers posted on the site | Not published; quoted by a rep, varies by market and practice area |
| Contract | No build contract; retainers cancel after month 3 | Commonly reported as 12 to 36 months, often three years, with auto-renewal |
| Who owns the domain | You, in your own registrar | Reviewers report the domain stays with FindLaw and is lost on exit |
| Platform | WordPress, your choice of Divi, Elementor, or the block editor | FindLaw's proprietary platform |
| What you keep if you leave | Everything: site, domain, accounts, content | Content rights, per reviewers, but you rebuild the site elsewhere |
| AEO (cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, AI Overviews) | Built into every page by default | Not a named part of the website product |
| Directory listing included | No. We don't run a directory | Yes, and it's the genuinely valuable half of the offer |
FindLaw's low entry price is real, and we're not going to pretend otherwise. A rented site can start cheaper than a build. The question is what three years looks like, and what you hold at the end of it. These figures use reported FindLaw pricing, not a quote we can vouch for, so treat them as a sketch rather than a bill.
A reported FindLaw website plan around $250 a month is about $3,000 in year one, which lands close to FirmForte's one-time $3,500 build. At this point it genuinely looks like a wash, and if you only think about year one, renting wins on cash flow.
By the end of year three that same plan is roughly $9,000, and at the higher reported tiers a good deal more. You've spent two to three times the FirmForte build, and you still own nothing. The FirmForte site has been paid off since month one.
Stop paying FindLaw and, per reviewers, the website and domain go with it. Stop paying FirmForte and nothing happens, because there's nothing to stop paying. The build was a purchase, not a lease. That gap is the whole argument.
If you'll keep a site for a year and then quit marketing entirely, the cheap rental might be the rational choice. If you expect to be practicing in three years, buying the asset once and owning it is hard to argue against. Most firms are in the second group and price it like the first.
A fair footnote: FirmForte's optional $1,750-a-month retainer buys active SEO and AEO work, which a bare FindLaw website plan doesn't really include. So the cleanest comparison above is build-versus-rented-site, not retainer-versus-everything. Don't let anyone, us included, compare two different things to win the point.
FindLaw has been around since the late 1990s and it isn't a con. There are real reasons firms stay, and pretending otherwise would just cost us your trust. Here's where it holds up.
People read FindLaw's legal guides while figuring out a problem, then look for a lawyer in the same place. That's a warm referral, not a cold click. In competitive personal injury, criminal, and family markets, especially across the Midwest and South, a listing can pay for itself. This is the half worth keeping.
A FindLaw profile links back to your site from a high-authority domain, which helps your own SEO and feeds the directory data that AI engines increasingly pull from. You don't need FindLaw to build your website to get this. The listing stands on its own.
If your budget genuinely can't absorb a one-time build and you need something live this week for very little a month, a rented site clears that bar. We'd rather you knew the trade-off than took it blind, but the low entry point is a real advantage for a firm that's truly cash-constrained right now.
FindLaw shares a parent with Avvo and Martindale, so a presence across that family can reinforce itself. If you're already invested in that ecosystem and it's working, there's a coherence to staying inside it that a small independent shop like ours can't replicate.
Leaving FindLaw's website product takes a little more care than leaving a normal host, mostly because of the domain and the auto-renewal. Here's the honest sequence.
Reviewers report FindLaw contracts auto-renew, often for another twelve months, unless you cancel in writing before the renewal date. Find that date before you do anything. Trying to leave mid-term is where the early-termination costs bite.
If your domain is registered under FindLaw rather than your own account, that's the piece to untangle early. We help you register or transfer the domain into a registrar you control, so the new site launches on the address your clients already know. If the domain truly can't come with you, we'll plan redirects to protect your search equity.
Because the FindLaw site is on a proprietary platform, there's no clean export, so we rebuild fresh on WordPress and carry your content over. You keep your content rights, per the reviewers who've read the contract, so the words and pages come with you even if the build doesn't.
Start the FirmForte build in the final weeks of your FindLaw term so the new site is ready to go live the day the old one lapses. No gap, no overlap, no double payment. And if the listing still earns its keep, keep it. Owning your website doesn't mean burning every bridge.
The full FirmForte lineup (Audit + Fix, Launch, Launch + Grow, Multi-Attorney) is on the pricing page, and the build itself is detailed on web design. Already on Scorpion instead? There's a FirmForte vs Scorpion breakdown too.
If your question isn't here, drop it in the audit form below. We answer everything within a business day.
The comparison above is the why. These are the what.
$3,500 flat, 21 days, WordPress you own. The one-time build at the center of this comparison.
Get cited by ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews. Built into every site at launch.
The other big legacy player, compared the same honest way.
How FirmForte stacks up against the other names solo and small firms end up shortlisting.
The honest trade-offs between building it yourself, hiring a freelancer, and a productized agency build.
Custom, AEO-first builds against Justia's bundled directory-and-website package.
Published pricing and full code ownership set against a proprietary platform with quote-on-request contracts.
Two boutique options compared on price, code ownership, and how each handles AI search.
Send us the URL. Within 48 hours, we'll come back with a 6-page report covering what's converting, what's leaking, and where your firm shows up (or doesn't) in AI search.
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