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Contract Review in Fort Worth

Contract review in Fort Worth.
Same day. No attorney needed.

Fort Worth attorneys charge $200-$400 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Aviation services, aerospace supply, manufacturing, energy, and defense contracts.

No credit card required. First 3 reviews free.

Fort Worth vs Kontractually

Same contract review. A fraction of the attorney cost.

Local Attorney
  • $200-$400/hr billing rate
  • 3-5 business day turnaround
  • $500-$1,800 per NDA review
  • Inconsistent review standards
  • No playbook customization
Kontractually
  • Flat monthly subscription
  • Results in under 2 minutes
  • Unlimited reviews included
  • Same rules applied every time
  • Fully customizable playbooks
FAQ

Contract review questions for Fort Worth businesses.

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Fort Worth is home to American Airlines and a significant aerospace manufacturing base, creating a high volume of aviation services agreements, MRO contracts, parts supply agreements, and prime-subcontractor arrangements. Key issues include FAA regulatory compliance language, flow-down clauses from prime contractors to subcontractors, liability allocation for airworthiness defects, warranty scope for safety-critical components, and export control (ITAR/EAR) compliance obligations. Kontractually flags missing regulatory flow-down requirements, asymmetric liability allocations, and warranty carve-outs that fall below playbook standards.

Fort Worth attorneys typically charge $200-$400 per hour for commercial contract review. Aviation and aerospace specialists often charge at the higher end due to the regulatory complexity involved. A standard NDA review costs $400-$1,000; a prime-subcontractor agreement review costs $1,500-$5,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews - useful for Fort Worth companies managing high volumes of supplier, vendor, and subcontractor agreements.

Prime contractors working with the federal government flow down contract obligations to subcontractors, often including FAR (Federal Acquisition Regulation) and DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement) clauses. These flow-down obligations can impose significant compliance requirements on subcontractors that are not always visible in the subcontract itself. Kontractually reviews subcontracts for missing flow-down clauses, undefined audit rights, and one-sided termination for convenience provisions that are common in government-adjacent aerospace agreements.

Texas is an at-will employment state but large employers in aviation, manufacturing, and defense frequently use employment agreements with non-compete and non-solicitation clauses. Under the Texas Covenants Not to Compete Act, these must be ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement and reasonable in scope, geography, and duration. Texas courts will reform overly broad restrictions rather than void them. Kontractually reviews employment agreements against your playbook rules, flagging overly broad restrictions, missing consideration for post-employment obligations, and compensation provisions that may create unintended obligations.

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