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Business and Estate Planning Lawyer in Leesburg, VA

Leesburg is both the county seat of Loudoun County and one of the fastest-growing small cities in Virginia. Its historic downtown sits alongside a booming residential market, a professional services sector, and a steady stream of business formation from owners who have relocated from Northern Virginia and the D.C. metro area. The legal needs of a city in that kind of growth look different from a stable suburban community. Business disputes happen earlier in a company’s life cycle than owners expect. Estate plans drafted in another state or a decade ago do not reflect current Virginia law or current family circumstances. I am a business and legacy planning attorney and my office is located at 15 North King Street, in the heart of downtown Leesburg.


That proximity is not just convenient. It means I have a familiarity with the local court system, the Loudoun County Circuit Court, and the specific ways Virginia law plays out for Leesburg clients. My practice covers two areas: business law, including contracts, and ongoing general counsel services, and estate planning, including trusts, wills, powers of attorney, and the coordination of all documents and beneficiary designations into a plan that actually works.

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    (540) 425-8278

    Why Leesburg Business Owners and Families Work With Brandon Davis

    Leesburg has no shortage of attorneys. What it has a shortage of is attorneys who handle both business law and estate planning with the same level of attention, and who work directly with clients rather than delegating to staff. My practice is structured around a different model: fixed fees, direct attorney access, and a genuine investment in understanding what each client is trying to accomplish.

    A Downtown Leesburg Office That Is Actually Accessible

    My office at 15 North King Street is walkable from Leesburg’s business district. That accessibility matters when documents need to be signed correctly under Virginia law or when a business emergency cannot wait for a scheduled video call.

    An Attorney Who Understands the Leesburg Business Environment

    Leesburg businesses range from solo professionals to multi-owner LLCs with complex governance needs. I have worked with clients across that spectrum, including those with contract relationships with federal agencies and large primes along Loudoun’s Route 7 corridor.

    Estate Planning Built Around What Leesburg Families Actually Own

    A home in Leesburg is worth considerably more than the national median. Families here frequently carry meaningful equity in real property, retirement accounts, and business interests, all of which an estate plan must account for. An incomplete plan creates the problems you were trying to avoid.

    Fixed Fees and a Creditable Consultation

    My fixed-fee model eliminates the uncertainty of hourly billing. The $200 consultation fee is credited toward your legal costs if you move forward, ensuring the first meeting is productive for both parties.

    Virginia Law in a Leesburg Context

    The Loudoun County Circuit Court, located in Leesburg, is where probate proceedings for Leesburg residents are filed. Probate in Virginia is administered under Title 64.2 of the Virginia Code, and while it is not the most burdensome probate process in the country, it is public, it takes time, and it involves court fees and administrative requirements that many families prefer to avoid. A revocable living trust funded during your lifetime sidesteps that process entirely, which is why it is the centerpiece of most estate plans I build for Leesburg clients with meaningful assets.

    On the business side, Virginia’s Limited Liability Company Act gives LLCs significant flexibility in how they structure management and profit-sharing, but the default rules that apply when no operating agreement exists often produce results that owners do not want. The default under Virginia law treats an LLC as member-managed, with voting power allocated proportionally to membership interest. That default fails immediately in a two-owner LLC where one partner contributes more capital but the other contributes more time. A properly drafted operating agreement addresses that imbalance from the start.

    Legal Services for Leesburg Clients

    Business Law

    Leesburg’s business community includes federal contractors, professional service firms, retail and hospitality businesses, and a growing number of technology-adjacent companies drawn by proximity to Dulles and the Northern Virginia data corridor. My business law practice covers the legal infrastructure these businesses need.

    Operating and Shareholder Agreements: Governance documents that define how your company makes decisions, how profits are distributed, and what happens when an owner exits or the business is sold.
    Contract Drafting and Review: Client service agreements, vendor contracts, independent contractor agreements, and non-disclosure agreements reviewed with your specific risk exposure in mind.
    Fractional General Counsel: Ongoing legal support on a subscription basis for businesses that need regular legal guidance without the overhead of in-house counsel or unpredictable hourly bills.
    Business Succession and Exit Planning: Legal structures that govern the transition of your business, coordinated with your estate plan so that both documents point in the same direction.

    Legacy (Estate) Planning

    Estate planning for Leesburg families involves Virginia-specific documents, court processes, and tax considerations that a one-size-fits-all approach cannot address.

    Revocable Living Trusts: Trusts allow Leesburg families to transfer assets to beneficiaries without going through the Loudoun County Circuit Court probate process, preserving privacy and reducing administrative time.
    Wills: A will under Virginia law appoints an executor, names guardians for minor children, and ensures assets not held in trust are distributed according to your intentions rather than the state’s default rules.
    Durable Powers of Attorney: A properly executed durable power of attorney under Virginia Code Section 64.2-1602 authorizes a trusted person to manage your financial affairs if you become unable to do so.
    Advance Medical Directives: Virginia’s statutory form allows you to name a healthcare agent and document your treatment preferences, reducing the burden on family members during a medical crisis.
    Legacy Preservation: My approach to estate planning includes attention to what clients want to pass down beyond assets, including family history, values, and instructions for how an inheritance should be used.

    My Process

    01

    Initial Consultation

    The engagement begins with a $200 creditable consultation at my Leesburg office or by phone. The focus is on understanding your situation completely before any recommendations are made. I will ask about your business structure, your family, your property, and what outcomes matter most to you.

    Two professionals in dress shirts engaged in discussion over documents and a tablet.

    02

    Legal Plan Design

    Based on what I learn in the consultation, I develop a legal plan that addresses your specific goals. For estate clients, this means a coordinated set of documents and beneficiary designations. For business clients, it means governance structures and ongoing counsel arrangements that fit the way your business actually operates.

    Two professionals in suits engaged in a document review at a wooden table with a laptop.

    03

    Document Preparation and Execution

    All documents are drafted by me and reviewed with you in detail. Virginia has specific execution requirements for wills, trusts, and powers of attorney. Every document is prepared to meet those requirements, and the signing process is managed carefully to ensure nothing is invalidated by a technical error.

    Man in black suit holding brass balance scale on wooden table in office.

    04

    Ongoing Review and Updates

    A legal plan is not a one-time transaction. I work with clients on an ongoing basis to ensure their plans stay current as their lives change. Leesburg families and businesses that have worked with me over multiple years consistently report that the relationship becomes more valuable over time.

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    Areas I Serve

    Serving Leesburg and Surrounding Communities

    I serve clients in Leesburg and throughout the surrounding area, including:

    Lansdowne, Ashburn, Sterling, Hamilton, Purcellville, Round Hill, Waterford, Lovettsville, Hillsboro, Lucketts, and communities throughout western and central Loudoun County.

    The Leesburg office at 15 North King Street is the central hub, but I work with clients from across the county and handle matters in the Loudoun County Circuit Court as part of my regular practice.

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    Frequently Asked Questions

    A will is a starting point, not a complete estate plan. In Virginia, a will must go through probate before your assets can be distributed, involving the Loudoun County Circuit Court in your family’s affairs. A will also does not govern assets that pass by beneficiary designation, such as IRAs and life insurance. If those designations are outdated, they override your will. A complete plan includes a trust, updated beneficiary designations, a durable power of attorney, and an advance medical directive working together.

    Without a succession plan, your business interest becomes part of your estate and passes under your will or, if you have none, under Virginia’s intestacy statutes, which determine who inherits based on family relationship rather than business competence. Co-owners may find themselves in business with your spouse or children, who were not part of the original agreement. A buy-sell agreement and a succession clause in your operating agreement prevent that scenario by establishing in advance who can acquire your interest and at what price.

    The $200 consultation fee is credited toward your legal fees if you retain Brandon for the matter discussed. It reduces the cost of your legal work dollar for dollar. That structure ensures the initial conversation is focused on real legal planning rather than a general introduction.

    Contact Brandon Davis, Esq. in Leesburg

    Your business and your family have taken years to build. The legal structures protecting them deserve the same level of care. I serve Leesburg clients from my downtown office at 15 North King Street, Third Floor. To schedule a consultation, call 540-425-8278 or email contact@bdavisatlaw.com. Consultations are subject to a $200 creditable fee.