WEB-DESIGN NICHE GUIDE
Web design for law firms: how to find & win them as clients
Small law firms and solo attorneys are a high-value web-design niche — a single case can be worth thousands, credibility is everything, and many small or newly-independent practices have a dated or missing website.
Find law firms with no website →Why law firms are a strong web-design niche
Legal clients research before they call and choose on trust and authority — exactly what a professional website conveys. Case values are high enough that one new client covers a build many times over, and practice areas, attorney bios, and content marketing create ongoing work.
What a law firm website needs
Practice-area pages
Clear, separate pages per area — which is also how legal SEO ranks.
Attorney bios & credentials
Authority and trust — the deciding factor for a nervous client.
Consultation request / intake
A simple, prominent way to request a consultation or case review.
Results & reviews (where allowed)
Social proof within bar-advertising rules.
Fast, professional, mobile
A polished, fast site that signals competence at first glance.
How to pitch law firms
Lead with trust and lost cases: “people choose a lawyer on credibility, and right now your online presence undersells you — the cases are going to firms whose sites look like they’ll win.” With case values what they are, the math is easy.
How to find law firms without a website
Scan a zip code in bizvoid, filter to the law firms category, and turn on the no-website filter to get a qualified list of law firms with no site. The ones that do have a website get a 0–100 flaw audit — a slow or non-mobile law firm site is a strong redesign lead. See the full guide to finding no-website businesses for the complete workflow, or build their site with AI.
Law firms web-design FAQ
How do I find law firms that need a website?
Scan a zip in bizvoid and filter to legal/professional services, then pull the firms with no site or audit dated ones — a slow, non-mobile legal site is a strong redesign lead.
What should a law firm website include?
Practice-area pages, attorney bios and credentials, a prominent consultation/intake request, results and reviews within advertising rules, and a fast, polished mobile experience.