One of the first questions prospective clients ask is, “What is this going to cost?” It is a fair question, and it deserves a candid answer rather than a sales pitch. The honest truth is that the cost of an appeal varies a great deal from case to case, because no two appeals involve the same record, the same issues, or the same amount of work. What we can do here is explain what an appeal is actually made of, what drives the price up or down, and how appellate fees are typically arranged — so that you can have a realistic conversation about the numbers before you commit.
We do not quote a flat price on a website, and you should be cautious of any appellate lawyer who does so before looking at your case. A meaningful estimate comes only after a lawyer reviews the matter. What follows is a framework for understanding the cost, not a price list.
An appeal has several distinct cost components. Understanding each one helps explain why two cases that sound similar can cost very different amounts.
By a wide margin, the biggest part of most appeals is the attorney’s time. An appeal is won or lost on the written work, and that written work is labor-intensive. The lawyer must:
Because the brief is the heart of an appeal, the time spent researching and writing it is where most of the fee goes. A case with a short record and one clean legal issue takes far less attorney time than a case with a sprawling record and several intertwined grounds for appeal.
An appellate court decides the case on the record made below, so that record has to be assembled and reproduced in the form the court requires — either a full record on appeal or an appendix accompanying the briefs. This is a real expense, and it is driven almost entirely by size. The longer the trial transcripts and the larger the underlying file of motions and exhibits, the more there is to compile, paginate, and reproduce. A short, simple matter produces a thin record; a multi-day trial with extensive exhibits produces a thick and costly one.
The courts charge fees to file the notice of appeal and to perfect the appeal. These are fixed amounts set by the court, not by the firm, and they are a relatively small part of the overall cost. They are predictable, but they are still part of the total you should budget for.
If the proceedings below were transcribed by a court reporter, the transcripts usually have to be ordered and paid for — and the reporter, not the firm, sets that price, generally by the page. Where there were several days of testimony or argument, transcript costs alone can be significant. If reliable transcripts already exist from the trial, this cost may be much lower or already covered.
If there is one thing that determines whether an appeal is modest or expensive, it is the length and complexity of the record and the briefing. Nearly every cost component above scales with that one factor:
This is why a lawyer cannot responsibly quote a number without first seeing the case. A two-issue appeal from a single motion is a different undertaking than an appeal from a lengthy trial with a dozen rulings in dispute. You can get a sense of the overall workflow on our overview of the appeals process in New York, which tracks closely with where the costs land.
Fee arrangements in appeals usually take one of two forms:
Whichever structure applies, the court filing fees, transcript charges, and record-reproduction costs are typically treated as separate out-of-pocket expenses on top of the legal fee. It is worth asking, at the outset, exactly what the quoted fee includes and what is billed separately.
One point that surprises some clients: contingency arrangements are much less common in appeals than they are at the trial level. A contingency fee — where the lawyer is paid a percentage of a recovery — fits a plaintiff’s case seeking money damages far better than it fits the narrower, document-driven work of an appeal, where the “win” is often the reversal of an order rather than a dollar recovery. Some appeals can be structured with a contingency component, but you should expect flat or hourly to be the norm.
As a general matter, the appellant — the party bringing the appeal — bears the cost of preparing and reproducing the record or appendix. If you are the one appealing, you should plan for those reproduction and transcript costs as part of the price of pursuing the appeal.
Money aside, the most important question is whether an appeal makes sense at all. A responsible appellate lawyer will walk through this with you before taking your money, weighing:
If the honest analysis is that an appeal is unlikely to succeed and the amount at stake does not justify the expense, the right advice is to say so. We would rather tell you that up front than take a fee for an appeal that was never going to be worth it.
Everything on this page is a framework, not a quote. The figures vary case to case, and the only responsible way to give you a number is to review your matter first — the record, the issues, and the relief you are seeking. We discuss realistic expectations on both scope and fees at the very outset, so there are no surprises later about what the appeal involves or what it will cost.
Appellate deadlines in New York are strict and jurisdictional — a civil notice of appeal is generally due within 30 days, with no good-cause extensions — so do not let cost questions cause you to delay. Call us at 212-233-1233 or email email@appealappeal.com, or use our contact page, and we will review your case and give you a specific, honest estimate before you decide whether to proceed. Reach out promptly, because once the deadline passes the right to appeal is lost.