Who walks in and why

The client arriving at Khattar Law, PC is usually dealing with two specific crises: a body broken in an accident, or a disability claim the Social Security Administration has refused. Both situations leave people scared, financially pressured, and without much runway to spend months interviewing attorneys. That context shapes what this review examines first.

Khattar Law, PC has operated out of San Antonio since 1991 with a deliberate two-lane scope: personal injury, covering car accidents, wrongful death, and accident-benefit claims, and Social Security Disability, covering SSI, SSDI, and the appeals that pile up after denials. Thirty-plus years without expanding into real estate, criminal defense, or employment law is a choice, and it means anyone whose situation falls outside those two lanes will be redirected rather than retained.

The contingency structure and what it commits the firm to

The injury side runs on a "no fees unless we win" arrangement. That is not a brochure phrase unique to this firm; it is standard in personal injury work, but it is still a structurally meaningful commitment because the firm absorbs cost risk alongside the client. If a matter is weak, the firm has financial incentive to know that up front. Disability-case fee terms are not spelled out on the site. That omission is common in SSDI practice, where federal fee caps apply, but a client should get the exact arrangement confirmed in writing at the outset.

Geographic reach as claimed extends beyond the San Pedro Avenue address in San Antonio to Austin, Dallas, and Houston in Texas, plus California. Khattar Law, PC does not explain on the site whether this means attorneys licensed in those jurisdictions or a looser referral-based arrangement. Anyone outside the San Antonio metro should ask directly how the firm proposes to handle their matter where they live before assuming it has the standing to do so.

A credibility problem with client-count claims

The most concrete concern with this listing is a numbers discrepancy that Khattar Law, PC has not explained. The firm's own site claims "over 40,000" clients served since 1991. This listing states "over 25,000." That is a 15,000-client gap between two figures attributed to the same source, and no rounding convention accounts for a difference of that scale. Neither number comes with independent audit documentation. The firm's longevity since 1991 is a real and verifiable fact. The volume claims are not, and stacking two contradictory self-reported figures on top of each other makes both of them harder to rely on.

Reputation: what the outside record looks like

The Khattar Law, PC website features an embedded Results page pulling live Google reviews, all shown at five stars. Pulling in Google content beats hand-selected testimonials for honesty, but the embed shows only top-rated entries and omits a total review count, so anyone doing due diligence should open the raw Google listing directly to see the full distribution.

Third-party platforms tell a different story. TrustAnalytica's San Antonio listing for Khattar Law, PC puts the firm at 4.1 stars. Elite Litigators rates it 3.8 and breaks it down: roughly 66 percent of reviewers called the firm's work "exceptional," while 28 percent rated it "substandard." That is not a small tail of outlier complaints; it is more than one in four clients landing in the lowest bucket. The Better Business Bureau carries a Khattar Law, PC profile listing owner Jason Khattar, which includes at least one strongly negative complaint. Additional aggregator profiles exist at Wheree, LegalListings.us, and Experience.com. ProvenExpert shows zero reviews, likely because the platform has low uptake among this firm's clientele.

Named staff appearing across outside reviews include Dennis Neitsch, Gabriel, Anthony N. Picillo, and Monica Munoz. A solo practitioner working under a branded firm name does not generate that kind of attribution across client accounts, so the spread of named individuals points to genuine team depth. The principal attorney, K. Jason Khattar, graduated from St. Mary's University Law School in 1995, which fits cleanly with the 1991 founding date. He is a named, searchable, independently researchable person, and that does more for due diligence than any client-count figure the firm publishes itself.

The mid-3 and low-4 averages across platforms do not reconcile easily with the five-star embed on the firm's site. Personal injury and disability cases are high-stakes on both sides: clients arrive in difficult circumstances, timelines stretch, and outcomes sometimes fall short of what the intake process implied. The wide split at Elite Litigators deserves direct follow-up questions about case communication and timeline expectations, not after retaining Khattar Law, PC, but during the free initial consultation the firm advertises.

Contact and published details

Khattar Law, PC publishes its full street address on San Pedro Avenue in San Antonio, a phone number at the top of the main page, a management email address, stated business hours of Monday through Friday from 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and a reCAPTCHA-protected contact form. That level of published detail is a basic but meaningful floor for any firm; firms that obscure their address or omit business hours invite different questions about accessibility, and Khattar Law, PC clears it.

Khattar Law, PC is a long-running, deliberately narrow Texas firm with a legitimate contingency structure for injury cases, a free consultation on offer, and enough published contact information to investigate the firm before any commitment. The 28 percent "substandard" fraction at Elite Litigators and the unresolved client-count discrepancy between the firm's own site and this listing are the two facts that deserve the most weight, and neither one disappears after a pleasant intake call.


Business address
Khattar Law, PC
Address: 1616 San Pedro Ave,,
San Antonio,
Texas
78212
United States

Contact details
Phone: (210) 923-1234
Fax: 210-822-4595