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40% off Annual Legal Plans @ Lawpath

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Lawpath's biggest deal of the year is here!

We're helping Australian businesses access legal help for less by offering 40% off our annual legal plans this Black Friday.

Our Legal Essentials Plan is available for just $273.60 (billed annually). Down from $456, this is an 40% discount on one of our most sought-after products.

The Essentials plan offers access to:

350+ Legal & business documents
Unlimited revisions to new and existing documents on our platform
Our eSignature tool which allows you to sign unlimited documents online
Multiple download formats (Word + PDF)
$10,000 worth of exclusive partner offers from leading business resources, including MYOB, BizCover, Tyro, and Canva

Our Legal Advice Plan is also available for only $864 (billed annually, down 45% from $1440). This plan offers everything in the Essentials as well as:

On-demand legal advice
Unlimited 30-minute consultations with your lawyer (via phone, video call or chat)
On-call legal contract reviews (up to 4 pages)
A dedicated account manager
Discounted fixed price quotes on contract drafting

We hope a few Ozbargain entrepreneurs can set their 2023 up for success without lingering legal headaches. Please reach out if you have any questions or would like more information.

Have a great Cyber Weekend!

This is part of Black Friday / Cyber Monday deals for 2022

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closed Comments

  • Did you know that you have rights? The Constitution says you do. And so do I. I believe that until proven guilty, every man, woman, and child in this country is innocent.

    • +1

      Good, I can provide you free accommodation and meals with safeguards until proven guilty to make sure society is safe ;)

    • +1

      What has your rant got to do with this Deal - a legal advice service for a business??
      Absolutely nothing!

    • ^ whooosh :p

  • Is there a sample of what the documents refers to?

    I've just started my own firm and use lawpath as a virtual office.

    Are the 350+ legal and business documents court precedents or is it more just coporate letterheads aimed at consumers?

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