Contract review in Philadelphia.
Same day. No attorney needed.
Philadelphia attorneys charge $250-$500 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Healthcare agreements, financial services contracts, life sciences MSAs, manufacturing supply 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
Philadelphia is home to major hospital systems and life sciences companies. Healthcare service agreements commonly have issues with HIPAA Business Associate Agreement (BAA) obligations, data use and disclosure limitations, minimum necessary access requirements, and breach notification timelines. Pennsylvania's Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCARE) Act also affects healthcare liability provisions. Kontractually reviews healthcare contracts against HIPAA requirements and flags missing BAA terms, inadequate data security obligations, and liability provisions that conflict with MCARE.
Philadelphia attorneys typically charge $250-$500 per hour for commercial contract review. A standard NDA review costs $500-$1,000; a healthcare services agreement review can run $1,500-$4,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews at a fraction of that cost.
Pennsylvania enforces non-compete agreements if they are supported by adequate consideration (including a new job offer or promotion), reasonably limited in duration and geographic scope, and protect a legitimate business interest such as trade secrets, confidential information, or customer relationships. Pennsylvania courts will enforce a non-compete as written if reasonable, and will sometimes reform rather than void overly broad ones. Kontractually reviews non-compete clauses for compliance with Pennsylvania's reasonableness standards and flags provisions likely to face enforceability challenges.
Pennsylvania's Breach of Personal Information Notification Act requires businesses to notify affected Pennsylvania residents of a data breach involving their personal information in 'the most expedient time possible.' Contracts involving personal data should specify data security standards, incident notification timelines and procedures, data retention and deletion schedules, and allocation of breach response costs. For financial services and healthcare sectors, federal regulations (GLBA, HIPAA) layer on top of state requirements. Kontractually flags contracts that lack these provisions.
Review every contract before you sign. No attorney required.
Set up your playbook in 10 minutes. First 3 reviews free. No credit card required.
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