Consultation Request

Tell us what is happening and how to reach you

Use this page when you want My Law Tampa to review a potential legal issue, business problem, property matter, claim dispute, or other situation that may require counsel. A strong intake message does not need to be long. It should simply explain what happened, who is involved, what documents you have, and whether any deadline, hearing, denial, closing, or filing date is approaching.

Clear intake information helps us understand whether the matter appears urgent, what records may be needed next, and whether the issue is a fit for a consultation. If your matter already involves active correspondence, a denial letter, a contract, a notice, or court-related paperwork, mention that in the summary.

This page is designed to reduce friction, not create it. If you are unsure whether the issue belongs in a consultation, it is still helpful to reach out with the basic facts. The firm can determine whether additional information is needed after the initial review.

The most helpful intake messages are usually concise, chronological, and specific. They identify the core problem, the main people or companies involved, and the point at which the issue became urgent enough to seek counsel.

Direct contact

Email: [email protected]
Phone: (866) 994-7839
Text: (866) 994-7839

If you prefer not to use the form, you can still call, text, or email the office directly.

For truly time-sensitive matters, include the deadline or event date in the first line of your message so it is easy to spot during review.

If you already have a denial letter, contract, lease, notice, or demand, mention that immediately so the intake can be triaged more accurately.

Send your intake details

Provide the basics as clearly as you can. Dates, names, locations, contract or claim numbers, and copies of relevant notices often make the review process much faster.

    Please note: contacting the firm through this form does not by itself create an attorney-client relationship. Representation begins only after the firm has agreed to take the matter and any required engagement steps are complete.

    Practical tip: if your situation has a deadline, put that date near the top of your message. If it has no formal deadline but there is an event approaching, such as a closing, hearing, inspection, response date, or repair issue, mention that too.

    What helps us review faster

    • A short summary of what happened and what outcome you are seeking.
    • The names of the people, companies, carriers, or entities involved.
    • Any urgent deadline, hearing, denial date, closing date, or notice period.
    • The key documents you already have available.

    What happens next

    Once the message is received, the firm can determine whether more information is needed, whether the matter appears time-sensitive, and whether it is appropriate to schedule a consultation.

    If the issue is a fit, the next step is usually a more focused conversation about the timeline, the parties, the documents, and the practical objective.

    If more records are needed first, a clearer intake message usually makes that request more precise and more efficient.

    Before you submit

    Organize the timeline first. The best intake messages usually identify the problem, explain what triggered the dispute or concern, and point to the most important document or notice involved.

    What not to worry about

    You do not need to write a perfect legal summary. Clear facts, contact information, and the key deadline matter more than polished language or lengthy background.

    What to gather if available

    Helpful materials can include contracts, denial letters, notices, claim correspondence, lease language, photographs, invoices, emails, text messages, or a short timeline of key events. You do not need everything on day one, but knowing what exists is helpful.

    Why this page matters

    A better intake process helps the firm identify urgency, reduce back-and-forth, and respond more intelligently to matters involving active business, insurance, real estate, or litigation concerns.

    Good pre-consultation prep

    Try to identify the main question first: are you trying to stop a loss, evaluate a denial, respond to a notice, understand a contract, preserve leverage, or decide whether litigation risk is real? That framing helps the early review focus faster.

    For urgent matters

    If a response date, hearing, inspection, closing, lapse, or other event is near, say so plainly. Urgency is easier to evaluate when the triggering date and document are identified immediately.

    For complex matters

    If the issue involves multiple parties or a long timeline, start with the two or three facts that matter most. A concise summary can be followed by supporting documents once the core problem is understood.

    Office information

    My Law Tampa
    3702 W Spruce St #1076
    Tampa, FL 33607

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: (866) 994-7839

    Before you send confidential material

    You can describe the issue and attach or reference core documents, but it is best to stay focused and organized. If the matter is complex, start with the main timeline and the most important records. The firm can request additional documentation after initial review if needed.

    Serving Tampa and surrounding areas

    The firm is based in Tampa and regularly works with matters tied to Tampa, Hillsborough County, and related Florida legal issues where local facts and state-specific process matter.

    Whether you are dealing with a business issue, property concern, insurance problem, or other legal matter, a better intake message usually leads to a better first review.

    Before submitting the consultation request

    Use the form to summarize the core issue, best contact details, and any deadlines or documents that should be reviewed first. That makes the first follow-up materially faster.

    • Identify the practice area and most urgent deadline clearly.
    • Note any denial letters, accident records, contracts, or notices that can be shared safely.
    • Use the practice-area page first if you still need help choosing the right path.