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Law firms in New Hampshire

Get matched with vetted law firms licensed in New Hampshire. Firms bring a full team — senior partners, associates, paralegals, and investigators — which is often the right fit for complex cases in New Hampshire's Superior & Circuit Courts, from serious injury and multi-party litigation to business disputes and estate matters.

  • Licensed with the New Hampshire Bar Association
  • Deep bench for complex cases
  • Free case reviews available
  • You choose who to contact
~2 minutes Confidential
New Hampshire legal landscape
State bar
New Hampshire Bar Association
Court system
Superior & Circuit Courts
Population
1.4M
Firms listed
0
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Firms serving New Hampshire

0 firms licensed in New Hampshire.

No New Hampshire firms are listed publicly yet — but we still match you privately with firms and solo attorneys serving New Hampshire.

Ready to talk to a New Hampshire law firm?

Tell us about your case and we'll match you with vetted firms licensed in New Hampshire — free, confidential, no obligation.

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Key New Hampshire legal deadlines
Personal-injury SOL
3 years
Written-contract SOL
3 years
Negligence rule
modified comparative (51% bar)

General information only. Deadlines have exceptions — confirm with a licensed New Hampshire attorney before relying on any date.

Serving cities across New Hampshire

Working with a New Hampshire firm gives you a full team — senior partners, associates, paralegals, and investigators — which matters for complex litigation, business disputes, and cases with a lot of documents.

Common legal matters in New Hampshire

Pick your practice area to jump straight into a New Hampshire-specific intake.

New Hampshire legal questions, answered

How long do I have to file a personal-injury claim in New Hampshire?+

In New Hampshire the statute of limitations for personal injury is 3 years. Miss the deadline and your claim is almost always barred — talk to a New Hampshire attorney as soon as possible.

What if I was partially at fault for the accident?+

New Hampshire follows modified comparative (51% bar). An attorney licensed in New Hampshire can tell you exactly how the rule affects your recovery.

How much do New Hampshire attorneys charge?+

Most personal-injury and employment cases in New Hampshire are handled on contingency — no fee unless you recover. Flat and hourly fees are common for criminal defense, family law, estate planning, and business matters. Fee agreements must be in writing under New Hampshire bar rules.

Do I have to appear in a New Hampshire courtroom?+

Many matters resolve through negotiation, mediation, or settlement without a trial. Your attorney will handle most court filings and appearances; you generally attend only key hearings, depositions, or trial.

How quickly can I speak with a New Hampshire attorney?+

Most matches happen within a business day. Urgent matters — arrests, restraining orders, insurance deadlines — are prioritized and often reach an attorney the same day.

★★★★★

Got matched with a New Hampshire attorney the same afternoon. She walked me through the deadline and I filed with a week to spare.

Rachel M., Manchester
★★★★★

I compared two New Hampshire firms in one week — no pressure, no sales calls until I was ready.

Marcus T., Nashua
★★★★★

Transparent about fees before anything was signed. Exactly what I needed dealing with a New Hampshire court for the first time.

Priya S., Concord
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