Attorneys serving North Carolina
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No North Carolina attorneys are listed publicly yet — but we still match you privately with attorneys licensed in North Carolina.
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Answer a short questionnaire and we'll match you with vetted North Carolina attorneys who take your kind of case. Free and confidential.
Start my free questionnaire- Personal-injury SOL
- 3 years
- Written-contract SOL
- 3 years
- Negligence rule
- pure contributory negligence — any fault bars recovery
General information only. Deadlines have exceptions — confirm with a licensed North Carolina attorney before relying on any date.
Working with a solo attorney or small practice in North Carolina usually means a single point of contact, fast responses, and a cost structure built for individuals and small businesses.
Pick your practice area to jump straight into a North Carolina-specific intake.
North Carolina legal questions, answered
How long do I have to file a personal-injury claim in North Carolina?+
In North Carolina the statute of limitations for personal injury is 3 years. Miss the deadline and your claim is almost always barred — talk to a North Carolina attorney as soon as possible.
What if I was partially at fault for the accident?+
North Carolina follows pure contributory negligence — any fault bars recovery. An attorney licensed in North Carolina can tell you exactly how the rule affects your recovery.
How much do North Carolina attorneys charge?+
Most personal-injury and employment cases in North Carolina 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 North Carolina bar rules.
Do I have to appear in a North Carolina 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 North Carolina 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 North Carolina attorney the same afternoon. She walked me through the deadline and I filed with a week to spare.”
“I compared two North Carolina firms in one week — no pressure, no sales calls until I was ready.”
“Transparent about fees before anything was signed. Exactly what I needed dealing with a North Carolina court for the first time.”