Perhaps you have an offer to be a company’s first in-house attorney or perhaps you’re trying to convince a company that they need to take you on, alone. Can you be a legal department of one? Is there such thing as a solo in-house attorney?

Of course you can and of course there is! In fact, it’s fairly common for there to be only one in-house lawyer at many companies.

For smaller companies with limited legal needs, it makes sense to have one qualified lawyer as their General Counsel. After all, in-house legal guidance is always needed, even if a whole department isn’t. 

Solo In-House Work

Even if you’re the only in-house lawyer, the work will be surprisingly similar to that done by lawyers in larger legal departments. In fact, the “in-house” nature of your lawyering will probably be exaggerated even more. That means solo in-house practitioners will have to be even more of generalists, able to handle a wide variety of matters for their company. 

Of course, you won’t have to do everything alone. Companies with smaller legal departments will have to seek outside counsel more often. That’s going against the general trend since more corporate clients are insourcing work to growing legal departments.

It’s common for non-in-house lawyers (outhouse lawyers?) to think that working in-house is a panacea of good pay and easy hours. That myth is hardly true – working ten to twelve hours a day is far from unheard of for a GC – but it’s doubly untrue for solo in-house practitioners. 

Related Resources:

  • What It’s Like To Be A Solo In-House Lawyer (Above the Law)
  • 3 Ways to Find a Mentor While Working In-House (FindLaw’s In House)
  • Hiring Outside Counsel? 5 Things to Consider (FindLaw’s In House)
  • 5 Places to Look for In House Counsel Jobs (FindLaw’s In House)

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