Cities in TX with Most NY-Licensed Attorneys

44 cities in TX ranked by registered NY-licensed attorney office count.

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Showing 1-44 of 44 cities in TX

# City State Attorneys Relative
1 Houston TX 1,264
2 Dallas TX 872
3 Austin TX 713
4 San Antonio TX 146
5 Plano TX 99
6 Fort Worth TX 81
7 Irving TX 52
8 Spring TX 37
9 Frisco TX 35
10 Richardson TX 34
11 The Woodlands TX 31
12 Coppell TX 25
13 El Paso TX 25
14 Sugar Land TX 25
15 West Lake Hills TX 20
16 Katy TX 15
17 Round Rock TX 15
18 Addison TX 14
19 Southlake TX 13
20 Corpus Christi TX 12
21 Garland TX 10
22 Allen TX 9
23 Bellaire TX 9
24 Grand Prairie TX 9
25 Richmond TX 9
26 Denton TX 8
27 Laredo TX 8
28 Arlington TX 7
29 Carrollton TX 7
30 College Station TX 7
31 Flower Mound TX 7
32 Mcallen TX 7
33 Mckinney TX 7
34 Westlake TX 7
35 Harlingen TX 6
36 Prosper TX 6
37 Bedford TX 5
38 Brownsville TX 5
39 Cedar Park TX 5
40 Kingwood TX 5
41 Lakeway TX 5
42 Lubbock TX 5
43 Pearland TX 5
44 Trophy Club TX 5

How to read this list

Each city above is the office address on file with the New York Office of Court Administration for one or more registered NY-licensed attorneys. The same attorney can appear in only one city at a time - their currently registered office address, but many NY-admitted attorneys maintain offices outside New York (most commonly in Washington DC, Boston, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Newark). Attorneys with NY admission practicing from non-NY offices remain in this list because they are still registered with NY.

The relative-bar visualization in the rightmost column shows the city's attorney count as a percentage of the leading city in the current view. New York City dominates by such a wide margin that nearly every other city renders as a thin slice; switch to a state filter or a starting-letter filter to see relative scale within a tighter group.

Sort options surface different perspectives: Most attorneys highlights legal-market scale, Name (A-Z) supports lookup by city name, and State, then count groups out-of-state offices together to reveal the geographic spread of the NY bar across other jurisdictions.

Why offices, not coverage

PlainAttorney covers only NY-admitted attorneys. We do not (yet) cover the bar registries of California, Texas, Florida, or other states; if you see "Los Angeles" in this list, those are NY-admitted attorneys with offices in LA, not LA-admitted attorneys. To verify a CA-admitted attorney, use the State Bar of California search; for TX, the State Bar of Texas; etc. Cross-jurisdiction verification links are listed on our methodology page.

Data freshness

The NY OCA refreshes its open-data attorney registry quarterly. We re-import the dataset on each refresh and recompute city aggregates. Status changes (suspensions, disbarments, address moves) propagate within one quarter. For real-time status of any individual attorney, follow the link from any name in this list to the attorney profile page, then click the "Verify with NY OCA" link to query the live OCA registry.

Why some "small" cities have surprisingly high counts

Several cities in the list have attorney counts that look outsized relative to their population. White Plains, for example, holds thousands of NY-licensed attorneys despite a relatively modest population, because it serves as the legal-services hub for Westchester County and as the venue for the federal courthouse and state supreme court. Albany ranks high not because of municipal population, but because it is the state capital and the venue for the New York Court of Appeals. Garden City and Mineola have law-firm clusters that serve Long Island's commercial and matrimonial bar. Reading "city size" as "metro size" matters: an attorney's registered office is a real-estate decision driven by client base and court access, not by population density.

Cross-state offices and federal-system clusters

Washington DC consistently appears in the top ten of cities, even though DC is not part of New York State, because thousands of NY-admitted attorneys work at federal agencies (Department of Justice, SEC, CFPB, Treasury), in DC-headquartered law firms, or in policy roles at think tanks and trade associations. They retain NY admission while practicing federal law from a DC base. Boston, Newark, Philadelphia, and Stamford CT show similar patterns: NY-admitted attorneys who work at firms with strong NY-bar concentration but happen to be physically based in nearby major-market cities.

Using city pages for outreach research

If you're researching where to recruit, where to advertise, or where a particular firm has its NY presence, the city detail pages are the fastest entry point. Each city's detail page lists the top firms with NY-registered attorneys at that city's address, the dominant law schools (institutions whose alumni concentrate in that city), and the per-status breakdown of the local NY-admitted population. Click any city name in the table above to access these per-city pages.

Patterns visible in the city distribution

Three patterns recur across the city distribution. First, federal courthouses act as gravitational centers: the cities ranked highest correlate with the seat of a federal district court (Southern District of NY in Manhattan, Eastern District in Brooklyn, Northern District in Albany and Syracuse, Western District in Buffalo and Rochester). Second, state-court venues amplify regional bar concentration: Albany hosts the Court of Appeals; White Plains the Westchester Supreme Court; Mineola the Nassau County Supreme Court. Third, business-cluster cities punch above population weight: Garden City (real estate and matrimonial bars), Melville (corporate law for the Long Island tech corridor), and Stamford CT (financial-services general counsel offices spilling across the state line).

Source: NY OCA, Attorney Registrations Statewide attorney registry · 2026 Counts reflect registered attorneys in each city (any bar status).