LienFlash vs Hiring an Attorney: When Do You Need a Lawyer?
LienFlash handles routine preliminary notice filings the way TurboTax handles a simple W-2. But some situations still require a licensed construction attorney.
Disclaimer: LienFlash is a document preparation software, not a law firm. Competitor information on this page is sourced from publicly available data and may change. We encourage you to verify current pricing and features directly with each provider. This is NOT legal advice.
At a Glance
| Feature | LienFlash | Hiring an Attorney |
|---|---|---|
| Cost | $24.99 per notice | $150–$500+ per notice |
| Speed | Under 5 minutes, file from the job site | 3–7 business day turnaround |
| Legal Advice | None — document preparation only | Personalized legal counsel |
| Template Quality | Attorney-vetted, state-specific templates | Custom-drafted by a licensed attorney |
| Certified Mail | Included — USPS Certified Mail with tracking | Varies — may charge separately |
| Dispute Resolution | Not offered | Full representation available |
| Lien Enforcement | Not offered — notice filing only | Can file and enforce mechanics liens in court |
| Best For | Routine preliminary notice filings on standard projects | Complex disputes, lien enforcement, and legal strategy |
The TurboTax Analogy
Most W-2 employees don't hire a CPA to file a simple tax return. They use software. The same logic applies to preliminary notices. If you're a subcontractor filing a standard notice on a straightforward project, you don't need to pay an attorney $150–$500 for a document that follows a statutory template. LienFlash uses attorney-vetted templates that comply with each state's exact statutory requirements, including mandatory warning text, formatting rules, and service methods. You fill in your project details, we verify the address, and we mail it via USPS Certified Mail. Total cost: $24.99. Total time: under 5 minutes.
When You Absolutely Need an Attorney
LienFlash is not a law firm and does not provide legal advice. There are situations where hiring a licensed construction attorney is essential: (1) You need to actually file and enforce a mechanics lien in court. LienFlash handles preliminary notices only — the step that preserves your right to lien. The lien itself is a separate legal action. (2) You're involved in a payment dispute that may escalate to litigation. (3) The project has unusual complexity — multiple tiers of subcontractors, federal projects, or cross-state jurisdictional issues. (4) You've already missed your preliminary notice deadline and need legal guidance on your remaining options. In these cases, an attorney's personalized advice and courtroom representation are irreplaceable.
Cost Comparison on 10 Projects
Consider a subcontractor who works 10 projects in a quarter. With an attorney at $200 per notice, that's $2,000 per quarter just for routine document preparation. With LienFlash at $24.99 per notice, the same 10 projects cost $249.90 — an 87% savings. The Pro plan ($49/month) makes it even cheaper for high-volume filers. The money you save on routine filings can be redirected toward legal representation for the cases that actually require it.
Speed Matters More Than You Think
Florida gives you 45 days. Oregon gives you 8 business days. When you're running multiple jobs, a 3–7 day attorney turnaround can eat into a deadline that's already tight. LienFlash processes your notice in under 5 minutes and gets it into USPS Certified Mail the same day. You don't have to call an office, wait for a callback, or chase down a retainer agreement. You file from the truck and move on to the next job.
They're Not Mutually Exclusive
The smartest approach for most subcontractors: use LienFlash for every routine preliminary notice filing to protect your lien rights on every project. Keep a relationship with a construction attorney for the 5–10% of projects where something goes wrong and you need legal firepower. This way you're protected on 100% of your jobs without spending attorney-level money on routine paperwork.
Choose LienFlash If...
- You need to file a routine preliminary notice on a standard construction project.
- You want to save 87% compared to attorney fees for document preparation.
- You need same-day filing, not a 3–7 day wait.
- You work in FL, CA, AZ, NV, WA, or OR.
- You want USPS Certified Mail and tracking included automatically.
Choose Hiring an Attorney If...
- You need to file or enforce an actual mechanics lien in court.
- You're in an active payment dispute headed toward litigation.
- Your project has unusual legal complexity or cross-state issues.
- You've missed your preliminary notice deadline and need legal options.
- You need personalized legal advice, not document preparation.