Houston calling: Why Big Law is piling into America's energy capital

US and UK firms are investing in the Texas city which has emerged as one of the most important legal markets in the country.

Houston calling: Why Big Law is piling into America's energy capital
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Houston is emerging as one of the most important legal markets in the US, as investment floods into energy and infrastructure.

The surge in activity is drawing a wave of law firm expansion, with new offices, partner hires and even legal tech companies moving into the city to get closer to energy giants and the capital flowing through Texas.

A growing number of US and international law firms are expanding in Houston, chasing the wave of investment flowing into energy, infrastructure and the companies building the next phase of America’s industrial economy.

As capital pours into traditional energy, renewables and large-scale infrastructure, Houston has emerged as one of the most strategically important legal markets in the country.

Why Houston matters

Houston has long been considered the energy capital of the world. Dozens of the largest oil and gas companies are headquartered there, and the city increasingly sits at the centre of the global energy transition.

For law firms, that concentration of clients is hard to ignore.

“There is an enormous amount of energy and infrastructure investment in the US, with Texas capturing much of it,” says Max Campbell, a US-based legal recruiter at MRA Search.

“Houston is the heart of the energy sector in the same way New York is the heart of the private equity sector.”

Historically the market has been dominated by Houston-born firms such as Vinson & Elkins and Baker Botts, whose deep institutional relationships with the major energy companies have made them formidable incumbents.

But over the past decade a number of other players have also established strong positions. Latham & Watkins opened an office in 2010, with Kirkland & Ellis following suit four years later. Both are now considered among the city’s leading firms.

According to publicly available data tracked by legal analytics company Pirical, Kirkland has been the fastest-growing major firm in the market, increasing its partner headcount in Houston by 36% over the past three years and now counting the largest total number of partners in the city.

Firms pile in

Clifford Chance named private equity partner Alexandra Wilde as managing partner of its Houston office this week, a role she took on after joining the firm from Jones Day in 2023. The firm opened its Houston office that year and already counts 14 partners as part of a 40-lawyer team.

Mayer Brown has also expanded its Texas energy bench, hiring six partners from McGuireWoods across Houston and Washington, including the rival firm’s former Houston managing partner Yasser Madriz. The firm was an early mover, opening its Houston office in 1982.

Other firms are also positioning themselves to capitalise on the opportunity.

At the start of the year Paul Weiss launched in Houston with two partners and has since added a third. The move came after the New York firm previously explored a Houston opening in 2024, reportedly offering partners guarantees of between $10 million and $15 million to join.

Sullivan & Cromwell, the Wall Street stalwart known for its measured approach to expansion, has also been reported to be exploring a Houston launch, though no formal office opening has been announced.

The push is not limited to law firms either. Fast-growing legal AI startup Legora recently opened an office in Houston, describing the city as one of the country’s “most significant legal and commercial hubs” as it looks to get closer to major law firm and corporate customers.

Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Addleshaw Goddard£52,000£56,000£100,000
Akin£60,000£65,000£174,418
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Baker McKenzie£56,000£61,000£145,000
Bird & Bird£48,500£53,500£102,000
Bristows£48,000£52,000£95,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£55,000£58,000£125,000
Burges Salmon£49,500£51,500£76,000
Charles Russell Speechlys£52,000£55,000£93,000
Cleary Gottlieb£62,500£67,500£164,500
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clyde & Co£48,500£51,000£85,000
CMS£50,000£55,000£120,000
Cooley£55,000£60,000£157,000
Davis Polk £65,000£70,000£180,000
Debevoise £55,000£60,000£173,000
Dechert£55,000£61,000£165,000
Dentons£52,000£56,000£104,000
DLA Piper£52,000£57,000£130,000
Eversheds Sutherland£50,000£55,000£110,000
Farrer & Co£48,500£51,000£89,000
Fieldfisher£48,500£52,000£100,000
Freshfields£56,000£61,000£150,000
Fried Frank£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gibson Dunn£60,000£65,000£180,000
Goodwin Procter£55,000£60,000£175,000
Gowling WLG£48,500£53,500£105,000
Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer£56,000£61,000£145,000
HFW£52,000£56,000£103,500
Hill Dickinson£44,000£45,000£80,000
Hogan Lovells£56,000£61,000£140,000
Irwin Mitchell£43,500£45,500£78,000
Jones Day£60,000£68,000£165,000
K&L Gates£50,000£55,000£115,000
Kennedys£43,000£46,000£85,000
King & Spalding£62,000£67,000£175,000
Kirkland & Ellis£60,000£65,000£174,418
Latham & Watkins£60,000£65,000£174,418
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Mayer Brown£55,000£60,000£150,000
McDermott Will & Schulte£65,000£70,000£174,418
Milbank£65,000£70,000£174,418
Mills & Reeve£46,800£47,000£84,000
Mishcon de Reya£50,000£55,000£100,000
Norton Rose Fulbright£56,000£61,000£135,000
Orrick£60,000£65,000£160,000
Osborne Clarke£55,500£57,500£97,000
Paul Hastings£60,000£68,000£173,000
Paul Weiss£60,000£65,000£180,000
Penningtons Manches Cooper£48,000£50,000£83,000
Pinsent Masons£52,000£57,000£105,000
Quinn Emanueln/an/a£180,000
Reed Smith£53,000£58,000£125,000
Ropes & Gray£62,000£67,000£170,000
RPC£48,000£52,000£95,000
Shoosmiths£45,000£47,000£105,000
Sidley Austin£60,000£65,000£175,000
Simmons & Simmons£54,000£59,000£120,000
Simpson Thachern/an/a£178,000
Skadden£58,000£63,000£177,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Squire Patton Boggs£50,000£55,000£110,000
Stephenson Harwood£50,000£55,000£105,000
Sullivan & Cromwell£65,000£70,000£174,418
Taylor Wessing£52,000£57,000£115,000
TLT£44,000£47,500£85,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
Trowers & Hamlins£47,000£51,000£85,000
Vinson & Elkins£60,000£65,000£173,077
Watson Farley & Williams£51,500£56,000£107,000
Weightmans£36,000£38,000£70,000
Weil £60,000£65,000£170,000
White & Case£62,000£67,000£175,000
Willkie Farr & Gallagher£60,000£65,000£180,000
Withers£47,000£52,000£95,000
Womble Bond Dickinson£43,000£45,000£83,000
Rank
Law Firm
Revenue
Profit per Equity
Partner (PEP)
1DLA Piper*£3,130,000,000£2,500,000
2A&O Shearman£2,900,000,000£2,000,000
3Clifford Chance£2,400,000,000£2,100,000
4Hogan Lovells£2,320,000,000£2,400,000
5Linklaters£2,320,000,000£2,200,000
6Freshfields£2,250,000,000Not disclosed
7CMS**£1,800,000,000Not disclosed
8Norton Rose Fulbright*£1,800,000,000Not disclosed
9HSF Kramer£1,360,000,000£1,400,000
10Ashurst£1,030,000,000£1,390,000
11Clyde & Co£854,000,000Not disclosed
12Eversheds Sutherland£769,000,000£1,400,000
13Pinsent Masons£680,000,000£790,000
14Slaughter and May***£650,000,000Not disclosed
15BCLP*£640,000,000£790,000
16Simmons & Simmons£615,000,000£1,120,000
17Bird & Bird**£580,000,000£720,000
18Addleshaw Goddard£550,000,000£1,000,000
19Taylor Wessing£526,000,000£1,100,000
20Osborne Clarke**£476,000,000£800,000
21DWF£466,000,000Not disclosed
22Womble Bond Dickinson£450,000,000Not disclosed
23Kennedys£428,000,000Not disclosed
24Fieldfisher£385,000,000£1,000,000
25Macfarlanes£371,000,000£3,100,000

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What it means for UK firms

For the UK’s top firms, Houston remains a notable gap in their US footprints.

Clifford Chance currently has the most significant presence among the Magic Circle firms, while A&O Shearman inherited a Houston office through its 2024 merger with Shearman & Sterling. That office currently counts four partners.

Freshfields and Linklaters - both of which have been intentionally expanding their US offerings in recent years - do not currently have offices in Houston.

If you’re building a credible US platform and following where the capital is going, Houston becomes very hard to ignore.

Campbell believes that may not remain the case for long.

“Freshfields in particular is thinking seriously about Texas,” he says. “If you’re building a credible US platform and following where the capital is going, Houston becomes very hard to ignore.”

Corporate shift to Texas

The law firm push into Houston mirrors a broader corporate shift towards Texas.

Several major companies have recently moved key parts of their corporate structures to the state. Gibson Dunn is advising Exxon Mobil on its decision to move its legal domicile from New Jersey to Texas, reflecting the fact that the company’s leadership and core operations have been based in Houston for decades.

The firm’s Houston-based team also advised Nasdaq on the creation of Nasdaq Texas, a new Texas-based national stock exchange launched in March, which allows companies to list on an exchange formed under Texas law while still accessing Nasdaq’s global trading platform and market infrastructure.

Elsewhere, Elon Musk has relocated several of his companies to Texas. SpaceX moved its headquarters from California to the state and switched its domicile from Delaware to Texas in work led by Houston firm Bracewell. Tesla has also moved its state of incorporation to Texas from Delaware.

Another draw for companies is the Texas Business Court, a new dispute resolution forum established in 2024 to handle large commercial disputes and designed to challenge Delaware as the preferred venue for corporate litigation. Exxon Mobil cited the new system as a factor behind its decision to redomicile to the state.

That, of course, means more disputes work for law firms with a presence in Texas. Last year, Gregg Costa, global co-chair of Gibson Dunn’s trials practice group, told Bloomberg Law that litigation was “very hot in Texas”, adding that the state “is “increasingly where corporate America is going to be resolving a lot of its disputes.”

A tough market to crack

Despite the opportunity, Houston is far from an easy market to crack for newcomers.

Campbell says the city has its own legal culture and dynamics, making it harder for outsider firms to establish themselves.

Just because a firm has a strong reputation in New York doesn’t mean clients in Houston will automatically turn to them.

“It’s a tough market to break into,” he says. “Just because a firm has a strong reputation in New York doesn’t mean clients in Houston will automatically turn to them.”

That is partly because the leading Houston firms benefit from decades-long relationships with the energy majors that dominate the region’s economy.

“The strong Houston firms have a home turf advantage,” Campbell says. “They have very deep institutional relationships with large energy clients.”

For newcomers, success often requires hiring established local partners who already have those relationships.

But with billions of dollars continuing to flow into energy and infrastructure projects, many firms clearly believe the prize is worth the effort.

As Campbell puts it: “Texas is one of the most important legal markets in the US right now.”

FirmLondon office sinceKnown for in London
Akin 1997Restructuring, funds
Baker McKenzie1961Finance, capital markets, TMT
Davis Polk1972Leveraged finance, corporate/M&A
Gibson Dunn1979Private equity, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Goodwin2008Private equity, funds, life sciences
Kirkland & Ellis1994Private equity, funds, restructuring
Latham & Watkins1990Finance, private equity, capital markets
McDermott Will & Schulte1998Finance, funds, healthcare
Milbank1979Finance, capital markets, energy, resources and infrastructure
Paul Hastings1997Leveraged finance, structured finance, infrastructure
Paul Weiss2001Private equity, leveraged finance
Quinn Emanuel2008Litigation
Sidley Austin1974Leveraged finance, capital markets, corporate/M&A
Simpson Thacher1978Leveraged finance, private equity, funds
Skadden1988Finance, corporate/M&A, arbitration
Sullivan & Cromwell1972Corporate/M&A, restructuring, capital markets
Weil1996Restructuring, private equity, leverage finance
White & Case1971Capital markets, arbitration, energy, resources and infrastructure
Law firmTypeFirst-year salary
White & CaseUS firm£32,000
Stephenson HarwoodInternational£30,000
A&O ShearmanMagic Circle£28,000
Charles Russell SpeechlysInternational£28,000
FreshfieldsMagic Circle£28,000
Herbert Smith FreehillsSilver Circle£28,000
Hogan LovellsInternational£28,000
LinklatersMagic Circle£28,000
Mishcon de ReyaInternational£28,000
Norton Rose FulbrightInternational£28,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
A&O Shearman£56,000£61,000£150,000
Clifford Chance£56,000£61,000£150,000
Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer£56,000£61,000£150,000
Linklaters£56,000£61,000£150,000
Slaughter and May£56,000£61,000£150,000
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£55,000£58,000£125,000
Herbert Smith Freehills£56,000£61,000£145,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
FirmMerger yearKnown for in London
BCLP2018Real estate, corporate/M&A, litigation
DLA Piper2005Corporate/M&A, real estate, energy, resources and infrastructure
Eversheds Sutherland2017Corporate/M&A, finance
Hogan Lovells2011Litigation, regulation, finance
Mayer Brown2002Finance, capital markets, real estate
Norton Rose Fulbright2013Energy, resources and infrastructure, insurance, finance
Reed Smith2007Shipping, finance, TMT
Squire Patton Boggs2011Corporate/M&A, pensions, TMT
Law Firm
Trainee First Year
Trainee Second Year
Newly Qualified (NQ)
Ashurst£57,000£62,000£140,000
Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner£55,000£58,000£125,000
Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer£56,000£61,000£145,000
Macfarlanes£56,000£61,000£140,000
Travers Smith£55,000£60,000£130,000
Author of blog post.
Olivia Rhye
11 Jan 2022
5 min read