Fee Sharing & Referrals: California Requirements and Discipline Exposure
Referrals and fee splits can be compliant—and still create discipline risk if paperwork or disclosures are off. This page explains core rules (RPC 1.5, 1.5.1, 5.4, 7.2; B&P §6155) and highlights what OCTC actually charges. Written for attorneys under investigation. Not a remediation plan.
California permits fee divisions between lawyers of different firms if strict conditions are met: informed written consent from the client,
clear disclosure of the terms of the division, and a total fee that is not increased solely by reason of the division (RPC 1.5.1).
Paying for a recommendation is generally prohibited; permitted exceptions include reasonable advertising costs and certified referral services (RPC 7.2; B&P §6155).
Sharing legal fees with nonlawyers is barred (RPC 5.4) with narrow exceptions.
Contents
Governing Framework
RPC 1.5 (unconscionable/illegal fees); RPC 1.5.1 (fee division requirements); RPC 5.4 (no fee sharing with nonlawyers); RPC 7.2 (advertising, paying for recommendations); B&P §6155 (certified lawyer referral services).
Lawyer–Lawyer Fee Splits (RPC 1.5.1)
- Client consent: Client must give informed written consent to the terms of the division after disclosure of the share each lawyer will receive or the basis for allocation.
- Total fee: Cannot be increased solely by reason of the division; overall fee must be permissible under RPC 1.5.
- Timing & form: Get the consent in writing and keep it with the fee file; update if the division changes.
- Contingent matters: Ensure the fee agreement and final settlement statement mirror the division and show client net.
Referrals, Lead Generation & Advertising (RPC 7.2; B&P §6155)
- No “thing of value” for recommendations, except: reasonable ad costs, bar-approved referral services, permitted lead generation with required transparency, and nominal, non-contingent gifts not as consideration for referrals.
- Certified referral services

