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Cost Guide

How Much Does Business Due Diligence Cost in Louisiana?

Investigation pricing depends on the objective, available identifiers, jurisdiction, time required, urgency, travel, source costs, reporting, and whether field work is needed. A smaller standard retainer is commonly about $1,500 and a typical standard retainer is about $2,500, but the written quote controls.

This page explains how much does business due diligence cost in louisiana? through LPIIA’s fact-first operating standard. It covers lawful scope, preparation, methods, reporting, sources, local context when applicable, and the limits a client or attorney should understand before assigning the work.

Section 1

Direct Cost Answer

Non-surveillance investigations are quoted by scope. A smaller standard retainer is commonly about $1,500 and a typical standard retainer is about $2,500, but the written engagement controls. The final quote depends on the exact question, available identifiers, jurisdiction, time pressure, travel, field work, source fees, reporting, and whether the work requires specialized equipment or testimony. A low flat price can be misleading when the objective is undefined or the available information is weak.

Section 2

What the Rate or Retainer Covers

A professional quote should identify the authorized work, expected hours or phases, included reporting, communication, travel assumptions, source costs, and conditions that require approval. The retainer funds authorized work; it is not a purchase of a guaranteed outcome. Unused funds and billing practices are governed by the written agreement.

Section 3

Minimums, Travel, and Complexity

Minimums account for preparation, travel, positioning, research setup, documentation, and reporting that exist even when the visible event is brief. Rural locations, multiple parishes, airports, casinos, industrial sites, military areas, private roads, multiple exits, complex identities, or time-sensitive deadlines can increase planning and field time. Two investigators are used only when continuity, safety, multiple routes, or the assignment justify it.

Section 4

Reporting, Media, and Testimony

Reports require time to organize observations, verify names and dates, label exhibits, preserve original media, cite sources, state negative findings, and explain limitations. Testimony, deposition preparation, certified records, rush retrieval, extended media processing, or specialized consulting may be priced separately. Clients should ask what deliverable is included rather than comparing hourly rates alone.

Section 5

Examples, No Guarantee, and Quote Request

A narrow locate with strong identifiers may require less work than a multi-state identity problem. A fixed surveillance window may be easier to price than an unknown schedule. An OSINT review of one username differs from a fraud matter involving many accounts, domains, payments, and entities. No quote guarantees a result. Request a written scope by providing the objective, known facts, jurisdiction, deadline, and deliverable.

Common Questions

Does the quote guarantee a result?

No. The quote covers authorized work and deliverables, not a guaranteed event, location, recovery, or court outcome.

Why is a retainer required?

A retainer funds approved work, source costs, travel, field time, and reporting under the written agreement.

What information is needed for an accurate quote?

Provide the objective, people or entities involved, location, jurisdiction, deadline, known identifiers, documents, and requested deliverable.

Are travel and testimony included?

That depends on the written scope. Travel, rush work, multiple investigators, specialized equipment, testimony, and certified records may be separate.

Request a Written Scope

Provide the objective, known facts, jurisdiction, deadline, and requested deliverable for a case-specific quote.

Request a Quote

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