Session Prep
A legal session is most valuable when you arrive with specific facts, organized documents, and focused questions — not a vague description of your problem. The more prepared you are, the more specific and actionable the guidance you'll receive. Legal advice is only as good as the facts it's based on: incomplete context leads to hedged, conditional answers; complete context leads to clear, concrete recommendations. Before your session, organize the key facts chronologically and identify the specific documents, deadlines, or decisions at the center of your situation. If you have a contract, letter, demand notice, or other legal document to review, share it in advance or bring it to the session. Note the specific outcome you're trying to achieve — not just the problem you have, but what success looks like from your perspective. This framing helps your attorney give you advice that's optimized for your actual goals, not just technically accurate analysis. This guide organizes the most valuable questions across four areas: understanding your legal exposure, reviewing documents and agreements, developing strategy and next steps, and practical considerations around cost, timeline, and process. Not every question will apply to every situation — use this as a framework to build the list that's right for yours.
1.What is the most significant legal risk in my current situation that I might not have identified on my own?
Most people focus on the obvious issue in front of them. A good attorney surfaces the less obvious exposure — a clause in a contract that creates downstream liability, a procedural step that was skipped, or a deadline that's quietly approaching. This question asks them to be your critic, which is exactly what you need.
2.Is there anything in what I've described that could expose me to unexpected or disproportionate liability?
Invites them to assess the worst-case risk, not just the most likely outcome. Understanding where disproportionate downside exists lets you make a fully informed decision about whether and how to proceed. Advisors who only describe upside scenarios aren't giving you the full picture.
3.What does the other party's legal position look like from your perspective, and how strong is it?
Understanding how the other side sees the situation helps you negotiate, settle, or escalate more intelligently. An attorney who has represented both sides of this type of matter will give you a materially better answer than one who only sees it from one angle.
4.Is there a statute of limitations, filing deadline, or procedural requirement I should be aware of that could affect my options?
Missing a legal deadline can close off your best options entirely — and those windows are often shorter than most people realize. Always ask about time-sensitive requirements early in the session, before you've spent time on strategy that assumes options that may already be foreclosed.
5.What specific clauses in this document create the most risk for me, and which ones should I push back on or renegotiate?
Many people accept unfavorable terms because they don't know what's negotiable — or what's actually risky. An experienced attorney with depth in your type of agreement knows exactly where the leverage points are and which provisions are standard versus which ones are genuinely one-sided.
6.What language would you add, remove, or modify to better protect my interests in this document?
Gets you concrete redline suggestions rather than general commentary. An attorney who can give you specific language to propose is giving you something you can actually use in the negotiation — not just a list of concerns for you to solve.
7.How does this agreement compare to market standard for this type of contract, and where am I being asked to accept below-market terms?
Benchmarking against market norms tells you how much leverage you actually have and which concerns are worth pressing. An attorney who reviews dozens of similar agreements per year will know immediately what's standard, what's aggressive, and what's unusual.
8.If I sign this document as written, what are the most important obligations I'm taking on and how could they become a problem?
Forces a forward-looking risk assessment tied to specific contract language rather than general legal commentary. You need to understand not just what a clause says, but under what realistic circumstances it would actually be triggered and how bad the consequences would be.
9.Given everything I've described, what would you recommend I do — and what's your reasoning?
The direct recommendation question. Most clients want guidance from someone they trust, not an open-ended list of options. A good attorney should be able to give you a clear recommendation that accounts for both the legal analysis and your stated goals. Advisors who refuse to give a direct answer are often hedging more than the situation warrants.
10.What are the realistic best-case, most likely, and worst-case outcomes if I proceed the way you're recommending?
Forces a full-spectrum assessment, not just the optimistic scenario. You need the complete picture — including what happens if things go wrong — to make a genuinely informed decision about how to proceed and what level of risk you're accepting.
11.What are the two or three most important steps I should take immediately after this session to protect my position?
A good lawyer advises on actions, not just analysis. This reveals whether they're thinking about your outcome or just completing the hour. The best legal advisors leave every meeting with a clear, prioritized action list — and follow up if anything time-sensitive came up during the session.
12.What would change your analysis or recommendation if you learned it — what are the key unknowns I should resolve?
Reveals what additional information would materially affect the advice. If there are facts you haven't gathered yet, a good attorney will tell you which ones matter most. This also surfaces where your attorney has uncertainty in their current assessment.
13.What is your honest estimate of the time and cost involved if this matter escalates to the next level of complexity?
Sets realistic expectations about the financial commitment you may be facing. Legal costs are notorious for escalating beyond initial estimates — understanding the range of possible costs for different scenarios lets you make informed decisions about when to settle, when to push, and when to walk away.
14.What should I bring to or prepare before any follow-up sessions to make our time as efficient as possible?
The more organized and prepared you are for each interaction, the more value you extract from the attorney's time. Asking this shows you're treating the relationship as a partnership, not a one-way service. It also signals to the attorney that you're a client who will make their work easier.
15.Are there things I can do myself, or lower-cost resources I can use, to handle parts of this that don't require your expertise?
A trustworthy attorney will be honest about where their involvement creates the most value and where you can handle things yourself. Advisors who are unwilling to acknowledge this are optimizing for billable hours, not your outcome.
16.If this matter requires ongoing legal support beyond today's session, how do you typically structure that engagement?
Helps you understand what a continuing relationship looks like practically — retainer vs. as-needed, response time expectations, how billing is tracked. Knowing this upfront prevents surprises and lets you decide whether this attorney's working model is the right fit for your needs.