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contract.diy vs Hiring a Lawyer

Hiring a lawyer for a standard business contract can cost $500–$2,000+ and take days or weeks. contract.diy generates professionally drafted, jurisdiction-aware contracts in under 5 minutes — for a fraction of the cost.

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contract.diy is a document preparation service, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. Some competitors listed may offer attorney review services - consider what is right for your situation.

Side-by-side comparison

Feature
contract.diy
Hiring a Lawyer
Starting price
Free to sign up
$150–$400/hour
Per-contract cost
From $0.33/contract
$500–$2,000+
Time to first contract
Under 5 minutes
3–10 business days
Contract types available
NDA, Freelance, Lease, Services + more
Unlimited (custom drafted)
Custom contracts
Jurisdiction support
PDF export
Document editing
Requires billable revisions
Available 24/7
Revision turnaround
Instant
1–5 business days
Legal advice included?

Why professionals switch to contract.diy

95% cost savings on standard contracts

A lawyer charges $500–$2,000 to draft a standard NDA or service agreement. contract.diy produces the same document for under $1 — with jurisdiction-specific clauses included.

Minutes, not weeks

Lawyers juggle multiple clients. Even a simple contract can take 3–10 business days to draft and review. contract.diy delivers a complete contract in under 5 minutes, any time of day.

No billable hour surprises

Legal fees are unpredictable — a "quick" contract review can balloon into hours of billable work. contract.diy has transparent, fixed pricing with no hidden costs.

Iterate without extra charges

Need to adjust a clause or change terms? With a lawyer, every revision is billed. With contract.diy, edit inline and regenerate as many times as you need.

Perfect for standard agreements

Most business contracts follow established patterns — NDAs, service agreements, freelance contracts, leases. These don't need custom legal research. contract.diy handles them with professional quality.

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No credit card required. Create your first contract in minutes and see the difference for yourself.

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Frequently asked questions

Can contract.diy really replace a lawyer for contracts?
For standard business contracts — NDAs, freelance agreements, service contracts, leases — yes. These documents follow well-established legal patterns that contract.diy handles with jurisdiction-specific precision. For complex situations (litigation, mergers, regulatory compliance, or high-stakes disputes), a licensed attorney is still the right choice.
When should I still hire a lawyer instead of using contract.diy?
Hire a lawyer when: the contract involves significant financial risk (over $100K), you're dealing with complex regulatory requirements, the agreement involves intellectual property licensing with nuanced terms, you're in an active dispute, or when the other party has legal counsel reviewing the agreement. For everyday business contracts, contract.diy is the practical choice.
Are contracts from contract.diy legally binding?
Yes. A contract is legally binding based on its content and proper execution by the parties — not who drafted it. contract.diy generates contracts with all essential legal elements: offer, acceptance, consideration, capacity, and legality. The contracts include governing law clauses, signature blocks, and jurisdiction-appropriate language.
How much does a lawyer typically charge to draft a contract?
Attorney fees vary widely by location and specialization. A simple NDA costs $500–$1,500. A service agreement runs $750–$2,500. A commercial lease can cost $1,500–$5,000+. Most attorneys bill hourly at $150–$400/hour, with revisions adding to the total. contract.diy covers these same contract types for under $1 each.
Does contract.diy provide legal advice?
No. contract.diy is a document preparation service, not a law firm, and does not provide legal advice. The platform generates professionally structured contracts based on your inputs and jurisdiction, but it cannot advise on legal strategy, interpret specific laws, or represent you in disputes. For legal advice, consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction.

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Join professionals who create contracts in minutes - not days - without monthly fees or subscription traps.

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