A directory for injury counsel — free consultations, contingency representation, verified listings.
Waverly Injury Partners

Colophon · Editorial method

Waverly Injury Partners

An editorial reference for people who have been hurt and are trying to decide whether to retain counsel. We do not take referral fees, we do not rank firms by advertising spend, and we do not publish without verifying the listing against public records.

Firms listed2,715
States covered46
Intake fee$0
Referral feeNever

What this site is

Waverly Injury Partners is a directory of personal-injury counsel across the United States. Every listing records the firm name, office address, telephone, practice areas, and a plain-prose description drawn from public business sources. We add editorial context — what kinds of claims the firm litigates, whether intake is free, whether representation is typically on a contingency-fee basis — so that an injured person can make a short list without wading through billboards.

What this site is not

Waverly Injury Partners is not a law firm. It does not provide legal advice. It does not recommend, endorse, or certify any attorney or law firm listed. Listings are compiled and may be incomplete or out of date. Contacting a firm through a link on this site does not create an attorney-client relationship with that firm, and no such relationship exists between you and us.

Our editorial method

  1. Listings are pulled from public business directories, then verified against a second public source.
  2. Practice areas are recorded as stated by the firm, not inferred from marketing copy.
  3. Fee structure (free consultation, contingency fee, hourly) is recorded only when it is publicly disclosed.
  4. No firm pays for placement. There is no paid review. There is no sponsored listing.
  5. When readers flag an error — a closed office, a wrong phone number, an expired website — we update the record.

If you’ve been injured

Personal-injury deadlines are state-specific and shorter than many people expect. Most states set a statute of limitations between one and six years for ordinary injury claims; claims against public entities are usually much shorter. If you think you may have a claim, do not wait to call a firm simply because you are still being treated — intake is free, the call does not commit you to retaining counsel, and the firm can tell you whether your deadline is near.