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Contract Review in San Antonio

Contract review in San Antonio.
Same day. No attorney needed.

San Antonio attorneys charge $200-$400 per hour. Kontractually reviews the same contract in under 2 minutes - against your playbook, consistently, every time. Government services contracts, defense subcontracts, healthcare agreements, commercial leases, NDAs.

No credit card required. First 3 reviews free.

San Antonio vs Kontractually

Same contract review. A fraction of the attorney cost.

Local Attorney
  • $200-$400/hr billing rate
  • 3-5 business day turnaround
  • $800-$2,000 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 San Antonio businesses.

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San Antonio's large military presence means many businesses work as prime contractors or subcontractors under federal government contracts. Key requirements include FAR (Federal Acquisition Regulation) flow-down clauses that must be passed to subcontractors, DFARS (Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement) cybersecurity requirements (CMMC), small business subcontracting plan obligations, and compliance with the Service Contract Act for services contracts. Kontractually reviews government-related contracts for missing FAR and DFARS flow-down provisions and flags non-standard terms that could conflict with federal requirements.

San Antonio attorneys typically charge $200-$400 per hour for commercial contract review. A standard NDA review costs $400-$800; a government services agreement review can run $1,200-$3,000. Kontractually's flat monthly subscription covers unlimited reviews at a fraction of that cost.

Federal prime contractors with subcontracts exceeding $700,000 (or $1.5M for construction) must have a small business subcontracting plan and flow-down certain FAR clauses to subcontractors. Key flow-down clauses include FAR 52.222-26 (Equal Opportunity), FAR 52.222-35 (Veterans), FAR 52.222-36 (Disability), and DFARS 252.204-7012 (Cybersecurity) for defense work. Missing flow-down clauses in a subcontract can expose the prime contractor to compliance violations. Kontractually flags subcontracts that are missing standard federal flow-down requirements.

Texas non-compete agreements are enforceable if they are ancillary to an otherwise enforceable agreement, supported by adequate consideration (such as an employment agreement with confidentiality protections), and reasonable in scope, duration, and geography. Texas courts can reform overly broad non-competes rather than voiding them. For defense and government contractors, non-competes should be carefully scoped to avoid conflicts with federal employment protections and security clearance obligations. Kontractually reviews non-compete clauses for Texas enforceability and flags terms that are likely to face reformation.

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