Legal services are one of the highest-trust, highest-stakes purchases a person makes. When someone needs a lawyer, they're scared, stressed, and searching for someone they can trust with their livelihood, their family, or their freedom. Google reviews are how they make that decision.
Yet the average law firm has fewer than 25 Google reviews. Most attorneys consider review generation "beneath them" or worry about ethical complications. Meanwhile, the firms that have figured out how to generate reviews consistently are capturing the lion's share of local search traffic — and the clients that come with it.
Why Google Reviews Are Critical for Law Firms
Legal marketing has fundamentally changed. The Yellow Pages are gone. TV ads are expensive and unmeasurable. The modern client journey starts with a Google search — and what they find determines who gets the call.
- 84% of people trust online reviews as much as personal referrals when choosing an attorney (Clio Legal Trends Report, 2025)
- Law firms in the Google Maps 3-Pack receive 5-8x more clicks than firms ranked below
- Review quantity is the #1 differentiator in competitive legal markets — more than website design, ad spend, or attorney credentials
- The average legal client reads 7-10 reviews before contacting a firm
- Firms with 50+ reviews convert website visitors to consultations at 2x the rate of firms with fewer than 20
A Harvard Law degree on your wall means nothing to a client who finds your competitor's 4.8-star, 150-review Google profile first. Online reputation is the new credential.
Ethical Considerations: What the Bar Rules Say
Many attorneys avoid review generation because they're unsure about ethics rules. Here's the reality: every state bar association allows attorneys to ask for reviews, with a few important guardrails.
What's Generally Permitted
- Asking satisfied clients to leave a Google review
- Sending automated review request emails or texts after case closure
- Including review links on your website, in email signatures, and on business cards
- Responding to reviews (both positive and negative)
What's Generally Prohibited
- Offering incentives. No discounts, gift cards, or consideration of any kind in exchange for reviews. This violates both Google's terms and most state bar rules.
- Asking for specific language or star ratings. You can ask for a review. You cannot dictate what it says.
- Revealing confidential information in review responses. Even if a client shares case details in their review, you cannot confirm or elaborate on confidential information in your response.
- Writing or fabricating reviews. This violates ethics rules, Google policies, and potentially FTC regulations.
State-Specific Nuances
Some states have additional restrictions. For example, certain jurisdictions require that attorney testimonials include a disclaimer that results may vary. Others restrict the use of client testimonials in advertising, which may extend to solicited reviews depending on interpretation.
Our recommendation: Check your state bar's rules on attorney advertising and testimonials. When in doubt, consult your bar's ethics hotline — most have one, and they'll give you a quick answer.
The Law Firm Review Generation System
Step 1: Identify the Right Moment to Ask
Timing is everything for law firms. Unlike a dental cleaning or plumbing repair, legal matters are emotionally complex. You need to ask at a moment when the client feels genuine gratitude and relief.
Best moments to request a review:
- After a favorable case outcome (settlement, dismissal, favorable verdict)
- After closing on a real estate transaction
- After finalizing estate planning documents
- After a positive consultation where the client expresses gratitude
- After completing a business formation or contract review
Moments to avoid:
- During active litigation or negotiation
- After an unfavorable outcome (obviously)
- During emotionally charged family law proceedings
- While billing disputes are unresolved
Step 2: Set Up Automated Post-Case Review Requests
When a case closes favorably, trigger an automated sequence:
Day 1 (case closure): Personal email from the attorney thanking the client for their trust, summarizing the outcome, and including a soft review ask: "If you felt well-represented, we'd be grateful if you'd share your experience on Google. It helps other people in similar situations find the legal help they need. [Direct Review Link]"
Day 3: SMS follow-up: "Hi [First Name], it was a pleasure working with you. If you have a moment, a Google review helps others find quality legal representation: [Link]. Thank you!"
The Blueprint Growth Suite automates this entire sequence — from case status change in your CRM to review request delivery — so no client falls through the cracks.
Step 3: Train Attorneys and Paralegals
The most effective review request comes from the person the client trusts most — usually the lead attorney or the paralegal who managed day-to-day communication.
Script for attorneys: "I'm really glad we were able to get this resolved for you. If you have a moment in the next few days, a Google review would mean a lot to our firm. It's one of the main ways new clients find us, and it helps people who might be in a similar situation know they have options."
Script for paralegals: "We really enjoyed working with you on this. You'll receive an email with a link to leave us a Google review — if you have 60 seconds, it would really help our firm. No pressure at all."
The key phrase is "it helps other people." Clients are far more motivated by helping others than by helping a business's marketing efforts.
Step 4: Leverage Practice Area-Specific Platforms
Beyond Google, legal clients check industry-specific review sites:
- Avvo — The largest legal-specific review platform. Claim your profile, fill it out completely, and drive reviews here alongside Google.
- Martindale-Hubbell — Traditional legal rating service that now includes client reviews.
- Lawyers.com — Connected to Martindale, with significant consumer traffic.
- Yelp — Especially relevant for consumer-facing practices (personal injury, family law, immigration).
Prioritize Google first — it has the biggest impact on visibility — but don't neglect these secondary platforms, especially Avvo.
Step 5: Create a "Review Us" Landing Page
Build a simple page on your website (yourfirm.com/review) that explains why reviews matter and provides direct links to Google, Avvo, and any other platforms you're targeting. This gives you one URL to share across all channels.
How to Respond to Reviews as a Law Firm
Attorney-client privilege and confidentiality rules make review responses tricky for lawyers. Here's your safe framework:
Positive Review Response Template
"Thank you for taking the time to share your experience. We're committed to providing attentive, effective legal representation, and we're glad we could help. We wish you all the best."
Notice: no confirmation of the attorney-client relationship, no case details, no reference to outcomes.
Negative Review Response Template
"We take all feedback seriously. Due to our obligation to maintain client confidentiality, we're unable to discuss specifics publicly. We'd welcome the opportunity to address your concerns directly — please contact our office at [phone/email]."
This response is powerful because it:
- Shows professionalism to anyone reading
- Demonstrates your commitment to confidentiality (a positive signal)
- Moves the conversation offline without being dismissive
- Protects you from inadvertent privilege waiver
Review Strategies by Practice Area
Personal Injury
PI clients are often deeply grateful. The best time to ask is when the settlement check arrives. Automated text at settlement disbursement: "Congratulations on your settlement, [First Name]. If [Firm Name] provided the representation you deserved, a Google review helps others who've been injured find quality legal help: [Link]"
Family Law
Sensitive territory. Only ask after favorable outcomes in custody or divorce matters. Focus on clients who've expressed specific gratitude. Avoid automated mass requests — hand-select clients for a personal ask from the attorney.
Criminal Defense
Clients who had charges dismissed or reduced are excellent review candidates. Many are relieved and grateful. Note: some clients prefer anonymity. Respect that — a review from "A Google User" still counts for your ranking.
Estate Planning
Low emotional stakes and high satisfaction rates make estate planning clients ideal review sources. Automate a request after document execution — nearly every client is a good candidate.
Business Law
Business clients are professional and understand the value of reviews. A straightforward ask from the lead attorney works well. These clients also tend to write detailed, keyword-rich reviews that help with SEO.
Review Benchmarks for Law Firms
| Review Count | Competitive Position | Typical Market |
|---|---|---|
| Under 10 | Non-competitive | Won't appear in Map Pack |
| 10-30 | Entry-level | Competitive in small/rural markets |
| 30-75 | Competitive | Strong in mid-size markets |
| 75-150 | Dominant | Top 3 in most markets |
| 150+ | Market leader | Dominant in major metro areas |
Most law firms close 5-15 cases per month. If you convert 30-40% of closures into reviews, that's 2-6 new reviews per month. Within a year, you're at 25-75 reviews — enough to compete in most markets.
Using Reviews as Marketing Assets
Reviews aren't just for Google. Repurpose your best reviews across all marketing channels:
- Website testimonials page — Embed your top Google reviews (with attribution) on a dedicated testimonials page
- Social media content — Share review screenshots on LinkedIn, Facebook, and Instagram (with client's implied consent via public posting)
- Consultation presentations — Reference your review count and rating in initial consultations: "We have 120 five-star reviews from clients in similar situations"
- Email marketing — Include a rotating "client spotlight" featuring a recent review in your newsletter
- Google Ads — Your star rating automatically appears in Google Ads when you have enough reviews, dramatically improving click-through rates
FAQ
Is it ethical for lawyers to ask for Google reviews?
Yes. All state bar associations allow attorneys to request reviews from clients. The key restrictions are: no incentives, no dictating content, no fabricating reviews, and maintaining client confidentiality in any responses. Check your specific state bar's advertising rules for nuances.
Can I respond to a negative review about my firm?
Yes, but carefully. You cannot confirm or deny an attorney-client relationship, discuss case details, or share any confidential information. Use a general response that acknowledges the feedback and invites the reviewer to contact you offline.
Should I ask every client for a review?
Not necessarily. Focus on clients with favorable outcomes who've expressed satisfaction. For practice areas with sensitive subject matter (criminal defense, family law), be selective. For lower-stakes work (estate planning, business formation), automated requests after case closure work well.
How do Google reviews compare to Avvo reviews for lawyers?
Google reviews have a much larger impact on local search visibility — they're what show up in Maps and the 3-Pack. Avvo reviews matter for credibility when potential clients research you specifically. Prioritize Google, but build your Avvo profile too.
What's the fastest way to build our review count?
Implement automated post-case review requests through a platform like the Blueprint Growth Suite, train your team on verbal asks, and send a one-time review request to past satisfied clients who never left a review. This "reactivation campaign" can generate 20-30 reviews in the first month alone.
The Bottom Line
Google reviews are the most powerful, cost-effective marketing tool available to law firms. They build trust before the first phone call, improve your Google ranking, and create a compounding advantage that's difficult for competitors to overcome.
The firms that win aren't necessarily the best lawyers — they're the ones potential clients find first and trust immediately. A strong Google review profile delivers both.
Start with an automated post-case review sequence, train your team on the verbal ask, and commit to responding to every review within 24 hours. For a comprehensive guide to managing your firm's online presence, read our complete guide to reputation management for small business.
Ready to build your firm's online reputation? The Blueprint Growth Suite includes automated review generation, CRM, appointment scheduling, and reminder automation — everything a growing law firm needs in one platform.
Grow Your Law Firm with a 5-Star Reputation
Blueprint Growth Suite automates review requests, manages your online reputation, and gives you a CRM built for client-focused businesses.