How Much Does It Cost to Defend a Federal Healthcare Fraud Case
Federal healthcare fraud defense is among the most expensive categories of legal representation available, and the cost reflects the complexity of the work, the stakes of the proceeding, and the level of specialized experience that effective representation requires.
The practitioner who asks this question is asking the right one, and the honest answer is that the cost is substantial and variable, that it is worth understanding in detail before selecting counsel, and that the comparison that matters is not between attorney fees but between fees and outcomes. The attorney who charges fifty thousand dollars more than a less experienced alternative but who produces a declination instead of an indictment has not cost the practitioner fifty thousand dollars. They have saved the practitioner everything else that the indictment would have cost.
The Fee Structure in Healthcare Fraud Defense
Healthcare fraud defense attorneys typically charge through one of three structures: flat fees for defined phases of work, hourly rates against a retainer deposit, or hybrid arrangements that combine a flat fee for early phases with hourly billing for work whose scope cannot be estimated in advance. Each structure has advantages and limitations that depend on the specific case’s characteristics.
Flat fee arrangements provide cost certainty and are appropriate when the scope of work is reasonably predictable: a pre-indictment consultation and engagement with the prosecuting office, a sentencing representation in a matter where the conviction is not being contested, or an administrative proceeding with a defined scope. Hourly arrangements are more appropriate in matters where the investigation’s scope is not yet known, where the government’s conduct is unpredictable, or where the work required may expand substantially as the case develops. Hybrid arrangements attempt to combine the certainty of flat fees for predictable phases with the flexibility of hourly billing for phases whose scope is uncertain.
The Range of Fees
For a pre-indictment healthcare fraud defense engagement involving initial assessment, consultation with the prosecuting office, and development of a preliminary defense strategy, fees in major markets range from twenty-five thousand to seventy-five thousand dollars, depending on the attorney’s experience and the complexity of the matter. For a full defense engagement that includes grand jury representation, indictment response, motion practice, trial preparation, and trial, fees in complex healthcare fraud cases regularly exceed one hundred fifty thousand dollars and in the most complex matters involving extended trials, multiple defendants, and extensive document review can reach several hundred thousand dollars or more.
Need Help With Your Case?
Don't face criminal charges alone. Our experienced defense attorneys are ready to fight for your rights and freedom.
- 100% Confidential
- Response Within 1 Hour
- No Obligation Consultation
Or call us directly:
(212) 300-5196The engagement that addresses the full scope of a multi-agency investigation, including DEA administrative proceedings, OIG civil investigations, state medical board proceedings, and the federal criminal defense, requires resources across all those dimensions. The fees for comprehensive multi-agency representation in a significant healthcare fraud matter are at the upper end of the range, reflecting the scope of the work and the specialized expertise required in each forum.
The Cost of Not Defending
The cost of federal healthcare fraud defense must be assessed against the cost of an inadequate defense or no defense at all. A federal conviction in an opioid fraud case carries mandatory minimum sentences, license revocation, Medicare and Medicaid exclusion, asset forfeiture, restitution obligations, and civil False Claims Act liability. The financial consequences of an adverse outcome exceed the cost of representation by orders of magnitude in most significant healthcare fraud cases. The practitioner who invests in effective representation at the earliest stage is making a financial decision whose return on investment is measured against the alternative.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
The cost of representation is a known quantity. The cost of the alternative is uncertain but potentially unlimited: the criminal sentence, the lost income during incarceration and after license revocation, the civil liability, the forfeiture, the restitution. The practitioner who compares attorney fees against those alternatives and finds the fees daunting has not fully accounted for what they are comparing them against.
Payment Arrangements and Resources
Most federal healthcare fraud defense attorneys will discuss payment arrangements for practitioners whose resources are sufficient to support the defense but who cannot pay the full fee at engagement. Structured payment plans over the anticipated duration of the representation are common. Third-party payment from family members or related entities is available subject to the ethical rules governing disclosure and conflict of interest. The practitioner who raises the payment question directly and early in the engagement discussion will find that most experienced attorneys have addressed it before and can propose arrangements that reflect the financial reality of the specific situation.