Published on December 29, 2025 · 11 min read
Key takeaways
Marble operates as a full-service law firm focused on both family law and immigration. It connects clients with local, licensed attorneys who handle matters such as divorce, custody, adoption, green card applications, fiancé visas, and work authorization. Fees are structured per step (for example, filing, negotiation, mediation, court appearances) rather than per hour, and communication is included in the service rather than billed separately. Clients use a secure online portal to upload documents, receive updates, and message the legal team.
Manifest Law is an immigration-specialist firm. Its homepage explicitly segments services into three client types: extraordinary individuals, businesses, and families. It highlights a roughly 95% approval rate across key talent visa categories (O-1, EB-1 and EB-2 NIW), an average of 12+ years’ experience for lawyers, and more than 100,000 cases filed, with a technology platform designed to keep every task, document, and message visible in a single portal.
In practice, Marble’s broader scope can be helpful for people whose immigration questions intersect with family law, such as immigrants going through divorce, families pursuing adoption, or custody cases where immigration status matters. Manifest Law is designed for clients who only need immigration help and who want a tech-enabled, immigration-specific experience, often for high-skill employment or extraordinary-ability visas.
A typical Marble experience begins with a brief intake call, followed by a consultation with an attorney who outlines the strategy and provides a fixed, per-step quote for the matter. From there, the attorney collaborates with a paralegal and support staff to gather documents, prepare filings, and appear in court as needed for family law matters, as well as respond to requests from immigration agencies. The client portal centralizes messaging, uploads, and action items so you can see what is happening at each stage.
With Manifest Law, clients typically request a free consultation through the website and are paired with an immigration attorney whose experience matches the case type (for example, O-1, EB-1A, EB-2 NIW, family-based green card). The firm’s portal structures detailed questionnaires, evidence uploads, and status updates, and Manifest emphasizes high approval rates in the mid-90% range for key talent visa categories while clearly noting that past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
In day-to-day terms, Marble’s model prioritizes human, team-based support across both family and immigration matters, with predictable, step-based fees. Manifest’s model leverages immigration specialization and technology, aiming for efficient, data-driven preparation and tracking of immigration petitions and applications. Which feels better will depend on whether you want a broader relationship with a firm that can handle family law and immigration together, or a narrower, immigration-only engagement.
Both Marble and Manifest Law market alternatives to traditional hourly-billing law firms, but they structure non-hourly pricing differently and focus on different types of value.
Marble charges by service step rather than by the hour. Clients pay a fixed amount for clearly defined phases such as initial filing, negotiation, mediation, or court appearances, rather than open-ended hourly invoices or large retainers. This model is designed to reduce “surprise” bills, keep costs predictable, and let attorneys focus on strategy and preparation instead of tracking time in six-minute increments.
Manifest Law uses case-based immigration pricing that varies by visa category, complexity, and service scope. For example, its O-1 and EB-2 NIW pages quote flat legal fee ranges for attorney work, plus Manifest’s own service fees and separate government filing fees, rather than hourly rates. Specific quotes are provided after an assessment of the client’s profile and goals, which is typical for higher-stakes immigration matters.
From a value perspective, Marble’s model may appeal if you want predictable, step-based pricing, a team-supported experience, and the ability to handle both family and immigration work under one roof. Manifest Law’s value proposition centers on its immigration-only focus, mid-90% approval metrics for key visa categories, and a portal built to keep immigration cases organized and moving. Which is “better” depends on whether you need broader legal coverage plus pricing certainty, or targeted immigration expertise with a highly structured, tech-enabled process.
Both firms handle immigration, but they differ sharply in how broad their legal services are and how narrowly they define their focus.
Marble combines family law and immigration law within one platform. Clients can work with the same firm across divorce, custody, or adoption, and also for family-based immigration, green cards, and certain work visas. This can be particularly helpful in situations where immigration status intersects directly with family outcomes, such as international custody disputes, divorces involving non-citizen spouses, or adoptions with cross-border elements.
Manifest Law is immigration-only. It emphasizes high-skill and complex immigration work (including O-1, EB-1A, and EB-2 NIW), employment-based sponsorship, and family-based immigration, and it does not advertise separate family-law services such as divorce or custody. Its branding, metrics, and technology all center on immigration petitions, evidence strategy, and keeping those cases on track.
If your situation is purely immigration-related, you may weigh Marble’s team-based, step-priced approach against Manifest Law’s specialist, tech-heavy model. If you know or suspect that you will also need family-law representation tied to your immigration situation, Marble’s broader scope reduces the need to coordinate multiple separate firms. In either case, it is sensible to ask each provider during consultation how they would handle your specific mix of issues before deciding.
Marble serves clients across both family law and immigration. That includes divorcing spouses, parents seeking custody or support changes, families pursuing adoption, and immigrants applying for green cards, work visas, fiancé visas, and citizenship. This mix means many Marble clients have matters that span both areas, such as a divorce that affects a pending green card or an international custody dispute tied to immigration status.
Manifest Law focuses on immigration-only clients. Its marketing speaks to three main groups: extraordinary individuals (for example, O-1 and EB-1 talent cases), employers sponsoring foreign workers, and families seeking marriage or family-based green cards. Within those categories, Manifest highlights experience with high-skill visas, employment-based routes such as EB-2 NIW and PERM, and family immigration processes.
Both firms can support common immigration needs such as marriage-based green cards, work authorization, and naturalization. The main distinction is context. Marble can handle those immigration steps alongside related family law issues. Manifest Law concentrates on immigration itself, particularly for employment and talent-based cases. Clients who expect only immigration questions may weigh specialization more heavily; clients who anticipate interconnected family and immigration issues may value the ability to keep everything with one firm.
Marble describes itself as a national network of experienced local lawyers, with more than 600 attorneys serving over 75,000 clients across family law and immigration. Family law services are available in ten states, and immigration services are offered nationwide. Each client is matched with an attorney licensed in the relevant jurisdiction and supported by a broader team, which can help align local court practice with overall case strategy.
Manifest Law emphasizes depth rather than breadth. Its materials highlight immigration lawyers who collectively have 12+ years of average experience and have filed more than 100,000 cases across their work at Manifest and prior firms. Many of those attorneys focus on specific categories such as O-1, EB-1A, EB-2 NIW or EB-2 PERM, which allows them to track how adjudication trends shift and adjust evidence strategies accordingly.
Marble offers a secure client portal that centralizes messages, document uploads, and case status updates. Clients can log in to see which step they are on, what has already been completed, and what comes next, rather than relying only on phone calls or email chains. The portal supports communication with the attorney, paralegal, and support team, which helps keep everyone aligned on deadlines and next actions.
Manifest Law’s portal is built specifically for immigration work. Public pages describe structured questionnaires, evidence checklists, task tracking, and real-time updates for each stage of a petition or application. Clients can see what evidence is outstanding, what the lawyer is working on, and when key filings are submitted, which can be reassuring in longer employment-based processes.
Marble does not publish a single global approval rate, but it does emphasize client satisfaction. Its Trustpilot profile shows thousands of reviews and a high average rating, with themes such as clear pricing, support during stressful family situations, and helpful communication from attorneys and staff. Media coverage also highlights Marble’s growth and its attempt to make costs more predictable for typical family law and immigration clients.
Manifest Law’s marketing leans on approval metrics for specific categories rather than general satisfaction scores. Its O-1 and EB-2 NIW pages highlight approval rates in the mid-90% range, with more than 100,000 cases filed by its lawyers. The pages also include footnotes clarifying that the figures are based on cases handled at Manifest and at prior firms, and that past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Third-party write-ups and social content also describe Manifest as having 95%+ approval rates for extraordinary ability and similar employment-based cases.
Marble can be a strong option if you:
Marble’s model is built around predictability and human support. It will not guarantee specific outcomes, but it does try to make pricing and communication more transparent than traditional hourly approaches.
Manifest Law can be a good fit if you:
As with Marble, Manifest’s approval statistics are historical data rather than guarantees, so it is sensible to ask during consultation how its experience lines up with your specific facts and goals.
Marble offers a combination that is relatively rare in this space: full family law services, a nationwide immigration practice, fixed prices per case step, and a team-based support structure. For clients, that can mean one firm that can help with divorce or custody, adoption, and immigration matters, such as green cards and work visas, with one portal and one pricing model rather than multiple separate relationships.
Manifest Law brings deep, immigration-only specialization and strong published metrics in specific categories. Marble, by contrast, can be especially attractive if your life circumstances mean family law and immigration intersect, or if you value predictable step-based pricing and the reassurance of working with both an attorney and a support team who are available throughout your case. In either case, outcomes depend on your facts, evidence, and how agencies or courts exercise their discretion, so a consultation with each provider can help you decide which model fits you best.
Your family & immigration law firm
We are Marble - a nationwide law firm focusing on family & immigration law. Marble attracts top-rated, experienced lawyers and equips them with the tools they need to spend their time focused on your case outcome.
See my bio page