Home Legal Projects Ohio Review a Demand Letter in Ohio | 2 Proposals

How a Business Hired a Lawyer to Review a Demand Letter in Ohio

See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a business in Ohio seeking help to review a Demand Letter. The client received 2 lawyer proposals with flat fee bids ranging from $299 to $500.

Service type
Review
Document type
Demand Letter
Location
Ohio
Client type
Business
Client industry
Business
Deadline
Less than a week
Pricing Range
$299 - $500 (Flat fee)
Number of Bids
2 bids
Pages
4 pages

How much does it cost to Review a Demand Letter in Ohio?

For this project, the client received 2 proposals from lawyers to review a Demand Letter in Ohio, with flat fee bids ranging from $299 to $500 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.

Project Description

In 2026, a business in Ohio sought assistance with a demand letter related to a partnership dispute. The client already had a comprehensive draft of the letter, which included supporting facts and evidence, and aimed to engage an attorney to review and refine the document before it was sent to the opposing counsel. The client specifically requested that the final version be delivered on firm letterhead and preferred a flat fee arrangement for this service. As a result, the client received two proposals from licensed attorneys, with flat fee bids ranging from $299 to $500, all submitted to meet the requested deadline of less than one week.

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Lawyers that Bid on this Demand Letter Project

Business, Estate and Intellectual Property Lawyer

(2)

12 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Founder & CEO

(17)

8 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$500/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Ohio Projects

Attorney

(3)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Property Issue
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$144/h

Attorney at Law

(3)

35 years practicing

Free consultation

Property Issue
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$300/h

Attorney

(2)

7 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$125/h

Attorney

(1)

8 years practicing

Free consultation

Business Issue
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Demand Letter Projects

Attorney

(31)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Startup Legal Counsel

(3)

18 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

IP Attorney

(4)

5 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Attorney

(19)

12 years practicing

Free consultation

Demand Letter
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Other Demand Letter Postings

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Forum Questions About Demand Letter

Demand Letter

Massachusetts

Asked on Feb 2, 2026

Can I get helping drafting a demand letter to my former company for my employment claims

I have potential employment related claims for discrimination, harassment, etc against my former employer. And wish to send a demand letter to offer early settlement. Need help with drafting this letter

Stephen R.

Answered Feb 13, 2026

Sure. It’s wise to have an attorney review any correspondence you’d send to an adversary you’re contemplating legal action against and it is often the case that such a letter when issued on an attorney’s letterhead triggers a response. That said, employment law is tricky since MA is an at will state meaning an employer can terminate for any reason at all outside of racial/sex/orientation bases or retaliation . Obviously there are nuances, but these are the broad strokes.

Read 1 attorney answer>

Business Issue

North Carolina

Asked on Apr 13, 2025

What are the tax implications of starting a side business while working full-time?

I am currently employed full-time and earn a stable income, but I am considering starting a side business to earn some extra money. I want to know what the tax implications would be in this situation, such as whether I would need to register as self-employed, how my income from the side business would be taxed, what deductions or credits I might be eligible for, and any other tax considerations I should be aware of before making a decision.

Jeff G.

Answered May 6, 2025

First, there's no specific "self-employment" registry. If you plan to operate a business in the state of North Carolina, you need to register with the Secretary of State. You would need to choose a specific entity form type (LLC, Inc, etc) and you would also need to choose how your entity would be taxed (some form types don't get a "choice" per se). But as a self-employed person, many opt to create a LLC as a "disregarded entity" with the IRS. This means that you have a business entity, with an IRS-provided TaxID number, and the protections of a limited liability company. But from a TAX perspective, the IRS would "disregard" the business and simply tax you on the earnings of the business. This can be of significance, so you'll want to talk with an attorney and/or a tax professional (CPA) about your planned activities and both your entity form type and your tax type so that you can optimize your choices. If you were to be an LLC as a disregarded entity (a sole proprietor), then you would owe both the taxes on your FTE wages as well as self-employed taxes (at a tax rate determined by your total earnings) on the money from your side job. So using round numbers, pretend tax rates and ignoring the concept of withholding, let's assume that your current federal effective tax rate is 20% and that you make $100K/year. You'd owe $20K in federal tax for your income. But if your side hustle also made $100K/year, your effective tax rate could creep higher (as an incremental tax, not every dollar is taxed at the same rate) to say, 22%, so you could end up owing $44K in tax. Which might be fine with you... until you forget to pay estimated taxes throughout the year and the IRS then penalizes you for not paying them a percentage of your earnings throughout the year (whereas the withholding payments from your FTE job are typically seen as those payments). All in all, there are a TON of considerations for doing this and it's not something you should just look online for free advice to fully answer.

Read 1 attorney answer>

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