Civil Lawyer
You practice civil law — handling non-criminal legal matters that range from contracts and torts to family and property law — and being the attorney clients turn to when they need legal help with civil disputes or transactions.
What it's like to be a Civil Lawyer
Most days tend to involve a blend of client meetings, drafting work, and litigation or transaction practice — meeting with clients, drafting pleadings or contracts, conducting discovery, and partnering with opposing counsel and courts. You'll often spend part of the time on the operational fabric of practice — billable hours, conflict checks, file management.
The harder part is often balancing client demands against the careful work that good legal practice requires. You'll typically navigate competing client priorities, court schedules, and the diligence each matter needs, where the work that pays often isn't the work that's most artistically satisfying.
People who tend to thrive here are legally rigorous, comfortable with the variable demands of civil practice, and skilled at the relationship side of representation. The trade-off is the billable hour pressure common to practice and the cumulative weight of carrying client matters. If you find satisfaction in representing clients through real legal disputes and transactions, the role can be a steady career in practice.
Where this role sits in the broader career landscape — and where it can take you.
Roles like this one sit within a broader occupational category. The numbers below reflect that full landscape — helpful for context, but your specific experience will depend on level, specialty, and where you work.
How this category is changing
Skills & Requirements
Navigate your career with clarity
Truest gives you tools to understand your strengths, explore roles that fit, and plan your next move.
Explore Truest career toolsTruest editorial: Fit check, role profile, things that vary, advancement analysis, lateral moves, interview questions.