Contingency fees are common in personal injury and class action work, where the lawyer bets on a financial recovery they help create. They’re rare in family law for a specific reason: the American Bar Association’s Model Rule 1.5(d) prohibits contingency fees in divorce, alimony, and custody matters in nearly every state. So when a divorce attorney offers a “no win, no fee” arrangement, what’s actually happening usually isn’t what the brochure suggests.
Why the rule exists in the first place
The ABA’s logic is straightforward. A contingency fee creates a financial interest for the lawyer in maximizing the marital estate’s transfer or the asset award, which conflicts with the public-policy goals of family law: settlement, the welfare of children, and ongoing relationships between parties. A lawyer paid 30 percent of the wife’s share of the marital estate has structural reason to discourage settlement, push for litigation, and oppose any equitable compromise that benefits the family at the expense of the gross award. State bars adopted the prohibition because the conflict produced documented harms โ prolonged cases, escalated conflict, and worse outcomes for children.
What the workarounds actually look like
Some attorneys structure arrangements that walk close to the line: hybrid fees where part of the bill is fixed and part is contingent on “results,” post-divorce collection contingencies on awarded sums, or contingent fees on related civil claims like fraud or marital tort actions. A few states allow narrowly defined post-judgment contingencies for collecting unpaid support, but these are exceptions, not the norm. If a divorce lawyer is pitching contingency in the underlying matter โ the dissolution itself, asset division, or custody โ they’re either operating in one of the very few jurisdictions that allows it, finessing the rule in a way the bar might not bless, or counting on you not knowing the rule exists.
What it signals about the lawyer
The deeper problem isn’t the fee structure itself โ it’s what offering it tells you about the attorney. Ethical family lawyers know the rule. They charge hourly or flat fees because that’s the structure their professional licensing permits. A lawyer pitching contingency is either ignorant of their own state’s rules of professional conduct or willing to ignore them, and neither is who you want representing you in the most consequential financial transaction of your life. The pitch usually targets clients who feel they can’t afford a retainer, which is exactly the population most vulnerable to a poorly structured fee arrangement that ends up costing more than a conventional one.
The bottom line
Real divorce attorneys quote retainers in the thousands and bill against them. That’s how the field works. If a lawyer offers to take your case for free until they “win,” ask them which state rule of professional conduct authorizes that arrangement. Watch their answer. If you can’t afford ethical counsel, the answer isn’t a contingency lawyer โ it’s legal aid, sliding-scale services, or a more limited scope retainer with a credible attorney. The cheap fix isn’t a fix.
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