The standard for downtown Toronto corporate counsel is set in towers like First Canadian Place: Bay Street firms with deep benches, hourly rates to match, and a file passed down through layers of associates. Hadri Law Professional Corporation takes the opposite shape. Founded in 2023, it works out of Suite 5700 at 100 King Street West with one credentialed lawyer, four working languages, and a practice that stays inside the corporate and commercial lane. The pitch is direct access to the person doing the work rather than a relationship managed by juniors.

Services offered

The service list is where the case for Hadri Law Professional Corporation sits. The firm handles incorporations under the Ontario Business Corporations Act, reorganizations and dissolutions, commercial agreements and lending, mergers and acquisitions across both asset and share sales, contract drafting and negotiation, employment matters including workplace policies and compliance, corporate tax strategy and audit appeals, notary services, and apostille stamps. The apostille item is worth flagging. A GTA founder with cross-border paperwork usually has to find a separate office for that stamp, so folding it in saves a step. The tagline, "Big-Firm Calibre. Boutique Attention," proves nothing on its own, but the scope underneath it is specific enough to check against what you need.

Geographic reach, rates, firm size

Hadri Law Professional Corporation lists its service area plainly: Toronto, Mississauga, Oakville, Burlington, Hamilton, Kitchener, Niagara, Vaughan, and Markham, with cross-border matters as a standalone practice area. International Business Law sits as its own category, which is the relevant detail for any GTA company carrying U.S. or European contractual exposure. Hadri Law Professional Corporation sizes at two to nine people. Clutch lists its rate at $300 and up per hour, which puts it in corporate-counsel territory for a downtown address. That is not the budget choice for a bootstrapped startup. It is a defensible number for a founder who wants the named lawyer on the file instead of a delegated associate, and a practice this small does not have the layers to delegate through anyway.

How to contact the firm

Contact is straightforward. Hadri Law Professional Corporation publishes a phone number and an email address without making you dig for them, and the office address is exact down to the suite. For a young firm, that openness counts for something: with Hadri Law Professional Corporation you know who you are calling and where they sit.

Nassira El Hadri's credentials

A boutique practice rises or falls on whoever signs the work, so the credentials are the thing to read closely. Nassira El Hadri holds an LL.M from Osgoode Hall Law School and was admitted to the Law Society of Ontario in 2021. The bar admission predates the firm's 2023 registration by two years, so the practitioner's training and standing are older than the letterhead. Hadri Law Professional Corporation as an independent practice is short on years. The lawyer behind it is not new to the field.

Multilingual practice in four languages

El Hadri works in English, French, Spanish, and Catalan. In commercial law that is more than a line on a profile. Contract review, negotiation, and client communication can run in the client's own language for a real slice of the GTA's business population. A Spanish-speaking founder or a francophone company moving into Ontario has a small pool of corporate counsel who can work on those terms without a translator in the room. For that group, the firm has a structural edge over English-only competitors with longer histories, and it is among the few options in the GTA that can engage a client in Catalan at all.

What to consider before engaging

The firm's youth is the variable to weigh. A first incorporation or a commercial lease carries different risk than a complex acquisition, and a buyer in the second group should ask directly about comparable prior matters before engaging. The credentials are published and verifiable. The depth of independent track record on big-ticket deals is not, and that distinction should guide how high-stakes the work you bring is.

Client reviews and reputation

There is little to read on the reputation side. Hadri Law Professional Corporation has a Better Business Bureau profile, but it is not BBB Accredited and carries no rating. The Facebook page sits at 61 likes. The Clutch profile is set up but holds no client reviews. The Yelp listing shows no rating or review count. The Bark profile is active and empty. No Google or Trustpilot ratings appear anywhere. For a 2023 firm, an empty review record is expected, but absence of bad reviews is not the same as evidence of good outcomes, and a buyer who weighs demonstrated client results will find nothing to weigh.

Should you request references first?

That blank column is a cost, not a formality. For routine corporate work where the credentials and the LL.M settle most of the question, it may not change the decision. For a high-value mandate it should push the due diligence onto references Hadri Law Professional Corporation provides directly, since the public record cannot supply them. To move forward, request two or three client references on matters that resemble yours, confirm the Law Society standing through the public registry, and judge the fit from there. The language range and focused corporate scope make Hadri Law Professional Corporation a sound first call for a multilingual or cross-border GTA founder; the reputation file just is not going to do any of that work for you yet.


Business address
Hadri Law Professional Corporation
100 King St W, Suite 5700,
Toronto,
Ontario
M5X 1C7
Canada

Contact details
Phone: 4379742374