Verified law firm list. Pulled live from Maps. Not last year's CSV.

Sole practitioners, small firms, regional players — every firm tied to a live Google Maps listing and a working website.

Personal injury law firms in TexasImmigration attorneys by cityEstate planning lawyers near zip 90210

law firms (Maps-verified)

70k

69,917 records

With phone

99%

68,995 records

With website

85%

59,541 records

Decision-maker layer

Limited

Coverage thinner — see notes below

What a row looks like.

Five real records, pulled live from the database when this page rendered. Business name, category, location, phone, and website are shown as-is. Owner names and decision-maker emails are gated — they unlock after signup, on this list and every other one you generate.

BusinessCategoryLocationPhoneWebsiteDecision-maker
Colorado Education LawLaw firm80014(720) 863-4256coloradoeducationlaw.comSignup required
Florida Education LawLaw firm32301(850) 567-8445fledlaw.comSignup required
LegalShieldLegal services23454(757) 944-8269wearelegalshield.comSignup required
Sarah White, Attorney at LawEstate planning attorney30188(678) 453-6490lawyersarah.comSignup required
Gina DeCrescenzo, P.C.Law firm10605(914) 615-9177decrescenzolaw.comSignup required

Real records pulled live from the database. Owner names and decision-maker emails are gated behind signup — start the free trial to unlock them on this list and the rest.

The buyer profile we see most often.

Law-firm lists get bought by legal practice-management software companies, court reporters, expert-witness services, marketing agencies pitching the local-attorney niche, malpractice carriers, e-discovery vendors, and recruiters. The thing that breaks list-buying for this audience is that the bottom of the market — sole practitioners with a single AOL email — gets oversold and overcharged. Buying a stale list means paying full price for shells. A Maps-anchored database keeps the floor at 'has an active office presence,' which screens that out by accident if not by design. The list still includes plenty of solo shops; they're just real ones. The other quirk worth flagging up front: practice-area filters are useful but imprecise, because a single firm often handles multiple areas and Google Maps assigns one primary category per listing. If you sell something that maps cleanly to one practice area — say, e-discovery for litigators or trust-management software for estate planners — you'll want to combine the Maps category filter with a website-content pass after the fact.

And what isn't.

Law-firm coverage in the database is heaviest on small and mid-sized firms with active office presences and weakest on BigLaw, virtual-firm models, and barred-but-dormant solos. That weighting is intentional — it's the natural shape of the data, not a curation choice — and it works well for vendors selling to the local-attorney economy. Practice areas surface as separate Maps categories where Google preserves them: personal injury, immigration, family, estate planning, criminal defense, IP. Decision-maker enrichment is sparse here; we surface a name when LinkedIn aligns to the firm, but not on every record.

You've probably seen the offers.

Law-firm CSV vendors trade on the appearance of comprehensiveness — three million attorneys! State bar coverage! — and the reality is that most of those entries are dormant, retired, or suspended. The Maps gate keeps you out of that swamp.

We're not pretending this database is perfect. The hub page shows the live counts across every vertical, including this one. Coverage and decision-maker density vary. The trial is the right way to spot-check whether your specific ICP is well served.

Three signals. One row.

Maps-anchored

Every record begins as a real Google Maps business. If a listing disappears, the row drops on the next refresh.

Re-verified per run

Each generated list re-checks against Maps before shipping. Closed shops, sold practices, merged operators get screened.

Sheet out

Your search → a Google Sheet. Re-run any time. No CSV downloads to organize, no zip files in folders named v3-final.

Generate your first law firm list in five minutes.

1,000 lookups, free, no credit card. If the data doesn't beat the law firm list you'd otherwise pay for, the trial cost you nothing.

While you're here.

See all 13 verticals on the hub →

About the law firm list.

Can I filter by practice area?

Indirectly. Maps surfaces practice areas as separate categories (personal injury law firm, immigration attorney, family-law attorney, etc.) — you can target by category. Bar-association practice-area data isn't in our database.

Do you cover BigLaw?

BigLaw is sparse here. The audience that uses Maps as primary search is local and mid-market — that's where coverage is strongest.

Is this actually a list, or is it a tool that generates lists?

Both. The list is generated live from a Maps-verified database, every time you run a search. Think of it as a list that updates itself — you get the same outcome (a list of businesses) without the underlying file going stale between when it was scraped and when you use it.

What happens at the end of the free trial?

Nothing automatic. The 1,000 lookups are yours, no credit card, no auto-convert. If you want to keep generating lists, you upgrade. If not, you don't. We'd rather not bait-and-switch you onto a subscription you won't use.