Abogados de Real Estate Law
1260 abogados de Real Estate Law encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

Sherrets Law Office

McCue Trial Lawyers

Law Offices of Carol Lynn de Szendeffy

Weiss Legal

Wallace & Partners

Law Offices of Carolyn Tanner

Felice & Associates

Hurtik & Partners

Hurtik Injury Lawyers

Baeyer & Associates

Fenton Legal

Cowin Law Group

Buck-Taylor Legal

Rollins Injury Lawyers

Walraven Trial Lawyers

Deaton & Associates

Becker & Partners
Real Estate Law Lawyers in the United States
Real estate transactions represent some of the largest financial decisions most people ever make. Whether you're buying your first home, selling commercial property, or dealing with a boundary dispute, a real estate lawyer protects your interests at every stage. The National Association of Realtors reports that over 5 million existing homes are sold annually in the U.S., and each transaction carries legal risks that can cost thousands if mishandled.
What Real Estate Law Covers
Real estate law governs the purchase, sale, use, and transfer of land and buildings. It covers residential and commercial transactions, including contract drafting, title searches, deed transfers, and closing procedures.
Beyond transactions, this area also addresses zoning disputes, landlord-tenant conflicts, easement rights, and property tax appeals. Construction defect claims, homeowner association disputes, and foreclosure defense all fall under this umbrella. If a piece of land or a building is involved, real estate law likely applies.
When to Hire a Real Estate Lawyer
- You're purchasing or selling property and need someone to review the contract and handle the closing
- A title defect or lien appears during a transaction, threatening your ownership rights
- You're facing a boundary dispute, encroachment issue, or easement conflict with a neighbor
- Your landlord or tenant has breached the lease agreement and informal resolution has failed
- You're dealing with a foreclosure action or need to negotiate a short sale with your lender
How the Real Estate Legal Process Works
The process depends on whether your matter is transactional or adversarial. For property purchases, your lawyer reviews the sales contract, orders a title search, identifies any liens or encumbrances, and represents you at closing. Most straightforward closings take 30 to 60 days from contract to keys.
For disputes, your attorney first attempts negotiation or mediation. If that fails, they file a lawsuit. Property litigation can take anywhere from several months to over a year depending on complexity. Roughly 95% of civil cases settle before trial, and real estate disputes follow a similar pattern.
How Financial Outcomes Are Determined
- Property damage claims are calculated based on the cost of repair or the diminished market value of the property, whichever applies
- Breach of contract damages typically equal the difference between the agreed-upon price and the property's fair market value at the time of breach
- In landlord-tenant disputes, tenants may recover lost security deposits, relocation costs, and rent differentials for comparable housing
- Title defect losses are measured by the amount needed to clear the title or the reduction in property value caused by the defect
- Construction defect recoveries factor in repair costs, temporary housing expenses, and any lasting decrease in the home's value
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a lawyer to buy a house?
Some states require attorney involvement at closing, while others do not. Even where it's not mandatory, having a lawyer review your purchase agreement can catch problems like unclear contingencies, title issues, or unfavorable terms that a real estate agent isn't trained to spot.
What happens if a seller fails to disclose property defects?
Sellers are generally required to disclose known material defects. If they hide problems like foundation damage, mold, or flooding history, you may have grounds for a fraud or misrepresentation claim. Successful claims can result in compensation for repair costs or, in some cases, rescission of the entire sale.
