Contract review in Dallas.
Same day. No attorney needed.
Dallas attorneys charge $250-$500 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Commercial real estate leases, financial services contracts, tech MSAs, healthcare agreements, NDAs.
No credit card required. First 3 reviews free.
Same contract review. A fraction of the attorney cost.
- ✗ $250-$500/hr billing rate
- ✗ 3-5 business day turnaround
- ✗ $1,000-$2,500 per NDA review
- ✗ Inconsistent review standards
- ✗ No playbook customization
- ✓ Flat monthly subscription
- ✓ Results in under 2 minutes
- ✓ Unlimited reviews included
- ✓ Same rules applied every time
- ✓ Fully customizable playbooks
Dallas commercial leases commonly have issues with rent escalation clauses (fixed vs. CPI-based increases), tenant improvement allowances and construction obligations, assignment and subletting restrictions, personal guarantee scope, holdover rent provisions (often 150% or 200% of base rent), and operating expense definitions. Texas does not have a statutory commercial landlord-tenant act, so the lease terms govern almost entirely. Kontractually reviews commercial leases and flags one-sided operating expense escalations, personal guarantees that exceed the lease term, and assignment restrictions that prevent common business restructuring transactions.
Dallas attorneys typically charge $250-$500 per hour for commercial contract review. A standard NDA review costs $500-$1,000; a commercial real estate lease review can run $1,500-$4,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews at a fraction of that cost.
Texas enforces non-compete agreements under the Texas Covenants Not to Compete Act if the agreement is ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement (typically a confidentiality or employment agreement), supported by adequate consideration, and reasonable in scope, duration, and geographic area. Texas courts have discretion to reform overly broad non-competes rather than voiding them. Dallas employers in finance, tech, and healthcare commonly use non-competes, and Kontractually reviews these provisions for compliance with Texas enforceability requirements, flagging overly broad terms that increase litigation risk.
Technology and financial services contracts in Texas should address data security obligations (Texas Business and Commerce Code Chapter 521 data breach notification), SLA terms and uptime commitments, liability caps calibrated to contract value, IP ownership for custom development work, and termination for convenience provisions. Texas also has the Deceptive Trade Practices-Consumer Protection Act (DTPA), which creates strict liability for certain misleading representations in business transactions. Kontractually flags contracts that lack data security provisions, have uncapped liability for SLA failures, or contain representations that could trigger DTPA exposure.
Review every contract before you sign. No attorney required.
Set up your playbook in 10 minutes. First 3 reviews free. No credit card required.
Start free trial