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Entertainment & Sports Law Lawyers

113 Entertainment & Sports Law lawyers found. Filter by state and city to find attorneys near you.

Tony  Harwood
Tony Harwood

Law Offices of Tony Harwood

Securities LawStockbroker & Investment FraudBusiness LawEmployment Law
Bronx25+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Tre Lovell
Tre Lovell

Lovell Trial Lawyers

Business LawEntertainment & Sports LawEmployment LawIntellectual Property
Hollywood20+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
Business LawEntertainment & Sports LawEmployment LawIntellectual Property
Lancaster20+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
William P. Lalor
William P. Lalor

William P. Lalor, Attorney at Law

Business LawInsurance ClaimsAppeals & AppellateProbate
Fairfield County25+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation
William Wardlow
William Wardlow

The Wardlow Firm

Business LawIntellectual PropertyArbitration & MediationEntertainment & Sports Law
Deschutes County26+ yrs exp. · Free Consultation

Entertainment and Sports Law Lawyers in the United States

The entertainment and sports industries generate over $800 billion annually in the United States. Behind every deal, contract, and career move, lawyers protect the interests of athletes, artists, producers, and organizations. Whether you're a rising musician or a professional athlete, legal representation shapes the trajectory of your career.

What Entertainment and Sports Law Covers

Entertainment law spans film, television, music, publishing, theater, and digital media. It deals with contract negotiations, intellectual property rights, licensing agreements, and talent representation. Disputes over royalties, credit, and creative ownership also fall under this practice area.

Sports law covers athlete representation, endorsement deals, salary negotiations, and eligibility disputes. It also addresses team ownership matters, league compliance, collective bargaining agreements, and anti-doping regulations. These two fields frequently overlap, especially as athletes build media brands.

When to Hire an Entertainment or Sports Law Lawyer

  • You've been offered a recording contract, publishing deal, or endorsement agreement and need someone to review the terms before signing
  • A dispute has arisen over intellectual property ownership, royalties, or creative credits
  • You're an athlete entering contract negotiations with a team, league, or sponsor
  • You face a disciplinary action, suspension, or eligibility challenge from a governing body
  • You want to form a production company, sports agency, or entertainment venture

How the Process Works

Most entertainment and sports law matters begin with a contract review or negotiation. Your lawyer examines proposed terms, identifies unfavorable clauses, and pushes for better compensation and protections. About 90% of entertainment disputes settle before reaching trial.

If a dispute escalates, your attorney may pursue mediation or arbitration, which many industry contracts require before litigation. For matters involving leagues or unions, the process often runs through internal grievance procedures first. Litigation remains a last resort but stays on the table when settlement talks fail.

How Compensation and Financial Outcomes Are Determined

  • Royalty structures are calculated based on sales, streams, licensing usage, and distribution platforms — artists typically earn between 15% and 25% of revenue depending on the deal
  • Athlete salaries are shaped by salary caps, market value, performance metrics, and collective bargaining terms specific to each league
  • Endorsement deal values depend on the individual's marketability, audience reach, exclusivity requirements, and contract duration
  • Damages in breach of contract claims are measured by lost income, lost future earnings, and the cost of opportunities destroyed by the breach
  • Intellectual property infringement awards factor in actual losses, the infringer's profits, and in some cases statutory damages up to $150,000 per work under federal copyright law

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a specialized lawyer or can a general attorney handle my entertainment contract?

General attorneys often miss industry-specific terms that can cost you significant money. Entertainment and sports contracts contain unique provisions around residuals, option clauses, morality clauses, and rights reversions. A lawyer who works in these industries daily knows what fair terms look like and where hidden risks sit.

What's the difference between a sports agent and a sports lawyer?

An agent focuses on securing deals and managing your career opportunities. A sports lawyer reviews and negotiates the legal terms of those deals, handles disputes, and ensures compliance with league rules. Many athletes use both, and some lawyers hold agent certifications, but the roles serve different functions.