Haynes and Boone, LLP is an established law firm with a New York office located at 30 Rockefeller Plaza that was launched in 2004 to serve clients across multiple industries and facilitate cross-border work. The firm has a long history of serving the New York business and legal community through associations with investment banks, financial institutions, investment funds, and institutional clients. Historically, lawyers across the firm have developed deep relationships with capital markets participants and major financial institutions over decades.
The New York office provides legal services across five primary practice areas: finance, real estate (acquisitions, finance, joint ventures, and leasing), bankruptcy and restructurings, corporate and securities, and litigation. The office focuses on serving clients in banking and finance, real estate, technology, aviation, and energy and renewables sectors. The firm leverages its multi-office presence to facilitate international work across Asia, Latin America, and other global markets, with particular strength in cross-border transactions and restructurings.
Haynes and Boone's New York office is described as the most actively expanding office in the firm, indicating significant recent growth and investment in the New York market. The firm emphasizes its ability to support clients' evolving needs during periods of economic transformation. The office is headed by Craig Unterberg as Managing Partner and maintains a substantial roster of partners with specialized expertise in bankruptcy, restructuring, capital markets, and real estate practice areas.
The firm operates as a traditional partnership-based law firm serving institutional and corporate clients rather than individual consumers. As a bankruptcy law firm, Haynes and Boone serves corporate entities, investment funds, and financial institutions navigating restructuring and insolvency matters. Clients should expect institutional-level legal services with pricing and engagement models tailored to complex commercial matters rather than personal bankruptcy cases for individual filers.