Subscribe |
Your Account
Subscribe |

Law firms with Twin Cities offices push first-year associate pay above $200,000

As the battle for good young lawyers intensifies, more of the massive law firms with a Twin Cities office have bumped compensation for first-year lawyers past the $200,000 mark.
As the battle for good young lawyers intensifies, more of the massive law firms with a Twin Cities office have bumped compensation for first-year lawyers past the $200,000 mark.
Reporter

At least three firms with Twin Cities offices are going as high as $215,000 for first-year associates. The question is: How many firms will follow suit?

Subscribe now for only $4

Already have a paid subscription? Sign in

Click to resize

As the battle for good young lawyers intensifies, more massive law firms with a Twin Cities office have bumped compensation for first-year lawyers past the $200,000 mark.

It's the latest step by law firms to raise base pay for new associates — who have already seen big boosts during the pandemic. The Business Journal reported last summer that many of the big firms in town raised first-year associate pay to $180,000 — up from about $120,000 a few years ago.

Now, three firms with Twin Cities offices are going above $200,000 for at least some of their first-year lawyers, according to the National Association for Law Placement. DLA Piper, a London firm that has about a dozen lawyers in the Twin Cities, is offering up to $215,000, Washington, D.C.-based Jones Day (with about 45 local attorneys) $210,000 and Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath (250 lawyers) up to $205,000.

It's not clear how many local attorneys are actually getting the higher pay levels. Faegre, in a statement, said the NALP survey "reflects data for all firm markets and is not specific to the Minneapolis market" and declined to comment further.

Click to resize

And Norton Rose Fulbright, also a London-based law firm with a Twin Cities office, has bumped first-year associate pay to $215,000, according to Above The Law's salary tracker. But a Norton attorney said the firm hasn't raised local pay to that level.

Still, the raises are another sign of upward pressure on lawyer compensation, a trend accelerated by the remote-work surge and demand for legal services. New York City firms and the like are recruiting attorneys and offering New York rates — and letting those lawyers work anywhere they want.

"Law firms' geographic lines are blurring," said Peter Ekberg, the Minneapolis office managing partner for London-based DLA Piper. "Just generally, this is a really crazy market for big law firms."

Most big law firms in in the Twin Cities, based on local attorney headcount, aren't ready to make another compensation bump — at least not yet.

"The firms that have announced an increase to $215,000 for first year associates are largely outside of our market or do not have a significant presence here," said Justin Weinberg, Taft’s Minneapolis partner-in-charge, which offers $180,000 to first-year associates. "While base compensation is important, and we are at the top of the market, we have much more to offer.  This includes a robust bonus program, top of market paid parental leave, a partnership track to one-tier of partner and a culture of inclusion and transparency."

The big firms based in Minneapolis like Winthrop & Weinstine, Maslon and Dorsey & Whitney echoed similar thoughts and said they're not moving figures up at the moment. Fredrikson & Byron declined to comment ,but the NALP shows first-year associate salary still at $180,000.

First-year attorneys who go to work at DLA Piper better be ready to put in some long days. DLA Piper, for example, expects a minimum of 2,000 billable hours annually. Firms such as Dorsey expect as few as 1,600 hours for a partner track.