Law Firm Web Development
TCPA-Compliant Law Firm Websites That Actually Generate Leads
Custom Websites for U.S. law firms, built to convert visitors into clients while reducing TCPA and privacy risk.
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Lawyers worried about contact forms and TCPA language
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Practices that want clear, trackable intake (injury, criminal, family, immigration, disability)
- TCPA-focused lead generation forms
Compliance Ready Websites
Custom WordPress/Divi builds with contact forms, consent language, and basic privacy pages aligned to legal marketing best practices.
Intake Forms & Consent
Streamlined intake forms and clear consent language help your firm collect the right information, reduce risk, and protect client trust online.
Ongoing Website Care
Updates, backups, plugin maintenance, and small content changes so lawyers stay focused on cases, not tech.
Why Compliance Comes Before Marketing
Law Firm Web Development
Most law firm websites collect names, phone numbers, emails, and case details, but their contact forms and disclaimers were never designed with TCPA, privacy, or ethics rules in mind. That gap can create unnecessary risk and uncertainty every time your intake team calls, texts, or emails a potential client.
This service focuses on building or rebuilding your website so the foundation is right: clear consent language, prominent disclaimers, and transparent privacy notices that align with modern expectations for legal marketing and client intake. Once the intake and compliance basics are in place, you have a safer platform to invest in SEO, ads, and other lead‑generation efforts.
Key compliance‑first elements we focus on:
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Clear, conspicuous consent language directly above the submit button
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Required checkboxes for consent and disclaimer acknowledgment
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“No attorney–client relationship” wording that is impossible to miss
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Privacy policy and data‑use explanations written in plain language
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Intake patterns that respect modern privacy and data‑protection expectations
Contact Us
What We Do
Compliance-Ready WordPress Websites
Full website design and development using WordPress and a flexible theme, tailored specifically for law firms. Every site is structured around clear navigation, strong practice‑area pages, and intake forms that include consent language, disclaimers, and privacy links in the right places.
You get a site that looks professional on the surface and is more disciplined under the hood: form language, checkbox behavior, and basic policies are all designed with compliance and client expectations in mind—not just aesthetics.
Intake Forms & Consent Optimization
If you already have a website that you mostly like, this service focuses on the parts that create the most risk: your contact and case‑evaluation forms. The goal is to keep your existing design while tightening the intake experience so the language is clearer and the user’s consent is better documented.
Typical improvements include revising or adding disclaimer text, rearranging where consent language appears, adding or making checkboxes required, and tying those elements into your privacy policy. This helps your firm feel more confident about using phone, text, and email follow‑ups as part of your intake process.
Ongoing Website Care & Compliance Updates
Rules, expectations, and best practices do not stand still. This ongoing service helps your firm keep its website maintained and its intake patterns aligned with evolving standards. The focus is not just technical updates, but also reviewing forms, language, and basic policies on a recurring basis.
As your firm grows or expands into new practice areas, you can add new pages, adjust consent wording, or expand your privacy notices without starting from scratch. The result is a site that stays current instead of drifting further away from compliance each year.
How the Process Works
1. Free Website & Intake Review
Everything begins with a short conversation and a walkthrough of your existing site, if you have one. The review looks at how your contact forms work, what disclaimers are visible, whether consent language is clear, and how your privacy policy is presented. You receive a prioritized list of recommended changes, whether you choose to work together or not.
This step gives you clarity: you see exactly where your current site is strong, where it may be vague, and what can be improved without unnecessary drama.
2. Compliance-First Design & Build
If you move forward, the next phase is designing or rebuilding your site in WordPress with a compliance‑first structure. The layout, wording, and placement of forms and notices are planned from the beginning rather than patched on at the end. You review mockups and content before anything goes live.
Throughout this phase, the focus stays on practical, readable language. The goal is not to drown visitors in legal jargon, but to give them a clear experience where they understand what they are agreeing to, what the site can and cannot do, and how their information will be used.
3. Launch, Testing, and Adjustments
Before launch, forms and intake flows are tested to ensure that consent checkboxes, disclaimer text, and privacy links behave as expected. After launch, there is a period of monitoring and adjustment where small refinements are made based on how real visitors use the site.
Your firm receives guidance on how to keep using the site responsibly: what to avoid changing, what to notify your own counsel about, and how to request updates if new requirements appear in your jurisdiction or practice area.
Compliance-First, Marketing-Ready
This service does not promise overnight SEO results or instant lead spikes. Instead, it creates a safer and more disciplined foundation for whatever marketing you decide to pursue—whether that is search optimization, paid campaigns, referrals, or a mix of channels.
Once the compliance basics are handled, you can add focused marketing services such as on‑page SEO, content development, and conversion optimization knowing the intake experience is not an afterthought. You are not locked into those extras, but the path to add them later is clear.
Law Firm Web Development FAQ
Q1. Do we really need special consent language on our contact forms?
Yes, if your firm uses phone numbers or emails from web forms for calls or texts, clear consent language is strongly recommended to show visitors understood they may be contacted and by whom. Placing that language near the submit button with a required checkbox is now widely treated as a best practice for TCPA and web‑form consent.
Q2. Is this guaranteed TCPA compliance?
No website can honestly promise “100% guaranteed compliance” because interpretation and enforcement can change, and every firm uses its data differently. What can be offered is design and wording that aligns with current guidance on clear, conspicuous consent, written disclosures, and documented agreement through checkboxes.
Q3. If someone clicks Submit, isn’t that already consent?
Courts have often looked at how consent is presented, not just the act of clicking a button. Generic “Submit” buttons without nearby disclosures or checkboxes are much weaker than forms where the disclosure is clearly visible and affirmatively acknowledged by the user.
Q4. Will this help with GDPR or other privacy laws if we get international traffic?
Yes, using clearer explanations of how data is stored and used, plus explicit consent checkboxes, moves your site closer to the expectations of frameworks like GDPR, especially if you might have visitors from the EU or similar jurisdictions. It does not replace a full legal review, but it is significantly better than collecting personal data with no explicit notice or consent.
Q5. What if my firm is only in one U.S. state—do we still need this?
Even purely domestic firms collect personal data through web forms, and modern privacy and marketing expectations still apply. Clear consent language, disclaimers, and privacy notices are viewed as basic professionalism and risk‑reduction, not something reserved for large or international firms.
Q6. Can you work with our existing website instead of rebuilding it?
Yes. Many firms start with an intake‑and‑consent “retrofit,” where only the forms, disclaimers, and privacy elements are updated while the rest of the design stays mostly intact. This is often the fastest way to improve your intake experience without a full redesign.
Q7. What if we don’t have a privacy policy yet?
A privacy policy is now considered essential for any site collecting personal data through forms, not just e‑commerce. Help can be provided in structuring and integrating a policy that explains what is collected, why it is collected, and how it is stored and used, with the understanding that your own counsel should review the final language.
Q8. Does this create an attorney–client relationship with visitors?
No—the entire point of the disclaimer structure is to make clear that submitting a form does not by itself create an attorney–client relationship, and that no legal advice is given through the site alone. Standard wording and placement patterns are used that intake guidance and legal scholarship recommend to avoid unintended relationships while still encouraging legitimate inquiries.
Q9. How long does a typical compliance‑first website project take?
For a full WordPress/Divi build, most firms can expect a timeline measured in weeks, not months, depending on how quickly content and approvals are provided. Intake‑only optimization projects are usually faster because they focus on targeted changes to forms, disclaimers, and policies rather than a complete redesign.
Q10. Can you coordinate with our in‑house or outside counsel?
Yes, and that collaboration is encouraged. The implementation focuses on layout, wording patterns, and technical behavior that align with current web‑form and privacy best practices, while your counsel can fine‑tune jurisdiction‑specific language and risk tolerances. This shared approach helps keep marketing, IT, and legal on the same page.
Ready for a website that attracts clients and respects the rules?
If your current website feels vague, outdated, or risky around intake and privacy, now is the right time to address it. A compliance‑first rebuild or retrofit can give your firm a professional presence and clearer intake flows without sacrificing design.

