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Abogados de Residential Real Estate

255 abogados de Residential Real Estate encontrados. Filtre por estado y ciudad.

William C. Devine II
William C. Devine II

II Injury Lawyers

BankruptcyEstate PlanningReal Estate LawProbate
Enterprise17+ años exp. · Consulta Gratis
William C. Peatross
William C. Peatross

Peatross & Partners

Real Estate LawCommercial Real EstateCondominiumsEasements
Ascension County58+ años exp. · Consulta Gratis
Zachary David Schorr
Zachary David Schorr

Zachary David Schorr, Attorney at Law

Real Estate LawProbateArbitration & MediationCommercial Real Estate
Los Angeles24+ años exp. · Consulta Gratis

Residential Real Estate Lawyers in the United States

Buying or selling a home is the largest financial transaction most Americans will ever make. The median home price in the U.S. exceeded $400,000 in 2024, and even small errors in the process can cost thousands. A residential real estate lawyer protects your money and your rights from contract to closing.

What Residential Real Estate Law Covers

Residential real estate law deals with the legal side of buying, selling, and owning homes, condominiums, townhouses, and other dwellings. This includes drafting and reviewing purchase agreements, conducting title searches, resolving boundary disputes, and handling closings.

Lawyers in this field also deal with deed transfers, mortgage disputes, zoning issues that affect homeowners, and problems discovered during inspections. If a seller fails to disclose a defect or a title has a lien on it, a real estate attorney steps in to resolve the issue before it becomes a lawsuit — or represents you if it does.

When to Hire a Residential Real Estate Lawyer

  • You're purchasing or selling property and want someone to review the contract before you sign
  • A title defect or undisclosed lien appears during the closing process
  • You're involved in a boundary dispute or easement conflict with a neighbor
  • The seller failed to disclose known property defects like mold, foundation damage, or flooding
  • You're facing a foreclosure and need to understand your options

How the Real Estate Transaction Process Works

The process typically begins with a signed purchase agreement between buyer and seller. Your attorney reviews this contract for unfavorable terms, missing contingencies, or language that could expose you to liability.

Next comes the title search and inspection period. Your lawyer examines public records to confirm the seller actually owns the property free of liens or competing claims. If problems surface, the attorney negotiates repairs, credits, or contract amendments.

At closing, your lawyer reviews the settlement statement, confirms all figures are accurate, and ensures the deed transfers properly. In roughly 22 states, an attorney must be present at closing by law. Even where it's not required, having one there catches errors that title companies miss.

How Financial Outcomes Are Determined

  • Failure-to-disclose claims — Compensation is based on the cost to repair the undisclosed defect, the difference in property value, and any related expenses like temporary housing
  • Title disputes — If you lose use of your property or part of it, damages reflect the fair market value of what was lost plus any improvements you made
  • Breach of contract — Buyers or sellers who break a purchase agreement may owe the non-breaching party their actual financial losses, including deposits, inspection costs, and price differences if the deal falls through
  • Foreclosure defense — Successful challenges can result in loan modifications, reduced principal balances, or dismissal of the foreclosure action entirely

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I really need a lawyer to buy a house?

Some states require attorney involvement by law. Even where they don't, a lawyer catches contract problems that real estate agents aren't trained to spot. The cost of an attorney is small compared to the risk of a $400,000 mistake.

How much does a residential real estate lawyer typically cost?

Most charge a flat fee for standard transactions, usually between $500 and $2,500 depending on the complexity and location. Litigation matters like boundary disputes or fraud claims are typically billed hourly or on a contingency basis.