Reading: Injury Lawyers The Kryder Law Group Opens Milwaukee Office in Wisconsin

Injury Lawyers The Kryder Law Group Opens Milwaukee Office in Wisconsin

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The Kryder Law Group, LLC has opened a new office in Milwaukee, giving the Chicago-based injury lawyers firm its first foothold in Wisconsin. The new location is at 3331 W. North Avenue, Suite 102, and marks a clear step beyond the firm’s Illinois base.

The move matters now because the firm is not simply adding an address. It is pushing its personal injury practice into another Midwest market after being named to the fastest growing companies in 2025, a badge that helps explain why founder is extending the business he started in Chicago in 2002. The firm’s main office remains at 134 N. LaSalle Street, Suite 1515, and the Milwaukee opening gives clients in Wisconsin a nearby option for claims involving wrongful death, falls, equipment injuries, construction accidents, work injuries, train crashes, airplane crashes and transportation injuries from car, truck, motorcycle and bus accidents.

That growth comes with a hard-edged pitch. Senior Litigation Partner said the firm prepares every case as if it will go to trial, arguing that careful preparation helps maximize value. Kryder said that approach remains central to the firm and that he is doubling down on what has set it apart from competitors. At the same time, the firm leans on client communication and customized strategies, a combination that tries to balance courtroom aggression with a more personal service model. That mix is part of the brand it is taking into Wisconsin.

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Kryder also framed Milwaukee as a natural next step because of its closeness to Chicago and the border Illinois shares with Wisconsin. The firm says more offices are planned in Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana, though it has not given a timetable or said how many lawyers or staff will work in Milwaukee. For now, the opening signals a broader Midwest push built around one core idea: the firm intends to keep growing without softening the trial-first posture that helped drive that growth.

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