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Kim Stagg, Citizenship Attorney in the United States

focused on Citizenship, Family Law, and Immigration

Dedicated citizenship attorney.

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Quick answer

Kim Stagg is an attorney based in Vancouver, BC. The practice focuses on Citizenship, Family Law, and Immigration.

Based in
Vancouver, BC
Experience
attorney
Known for
Citizenship · Family Law · Immigration
  • Handles Citizenship, Family Law, and Immigration matters from Vancouver, BC.

About Kim Stagg: Kim Stagg is an attorney based in Vancouver, BC. The practice focuses on Citizenship, Family Law, and Immigration.

Areas of practice

Practice areas handled by Kim Stagg

Kim concentrates on citizenship, family law, and immigration. Each area below outlines the kind of case Kim handles, typical outcomes to expect, and how the intake process starts.

Citizenship cases nationwide

Kim takes citizenship matters nationwide. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Kim agrees to represent you.

Family Law cases nationwide

Kim takes family law matters nationwide. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Kim agrees to represent you.

Immigration cases nationwide

Kim takes immigration matters nationwide. Typical engagements include intake calls to scope the issue, review of any records or filings you already have, and a written strategy memo before Kim agrees to represent you.

Biography

About Kim Stagg — Attorney of the U.S. citizenship experience

Kim Stagg is an attorney based in Vancouver, BC. The practice focuses on Citizenship, Family Law, and Immigration.

Kim Stagg is a lawyer practicing immigration and naturalization law, family law. Kim received a B.A. degree from University of Alberta in 1979, and . Kim practices in Vancouver, BC.

Kim's approach to citizenship cases

Kim Stagg is a lawyer practicing immigration and naturalization law, family law. Kim received a B.A. degree from University of Alberta in 1979, and . Kim practices in Vancouver, BC.

The kind of cases Kim takes

Kim reviews new inquiries case-by-case for citizenship, family law, and immigration matters in the United States.

Credentials

Kim Stagg's legal education and bar admissions

  • University of Alberta

    LL.B. · 1982

  • University of Alberta

    B.A. · 1979

Kim studied at LL.B. in University of Alberta and B.A. in University of Alberta.

Law school and academic background

Kim completed LL.B. in University of Alberta and B.A. in University of Alberta. Formal legal training is one signal of substantive knowledge — the day-to-day practice Kim runs in the state is where that training gets applied to real client questions.

Locations

Kim Stagg's office in Vancouver

Kim's primary office is at 1188 W. Georgia St., Vancouver, BC, V6E 4A2. In-person meetings are by appointment; a phone intake usually comes first.

Main office

1188 W. Georgia St.

Vancouver, BC V6E 4A2

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Client feedback

Client reviews of Kim Stagg

Kim has not yet collected verified client reviews on LawyersListed. Reviews here are all from confirmed clients; anonymous ratings are moderated out.

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Hiring guide

How to hire Kim Stagg — what to expect in your first consultation

Working with a new citizenship attorney should feel structured. Here's how the first two conversations with Kim usually go, from the moment you request a consult to the day representation begins.

Consultation formats and pricing

Kim charges for the initial consult. That fee is credited toward representation if you retain Kim's office.

What to bring to your first meeting

Bring any documents you already have — police reports, medical records, filed pleadings, correspondence from an insurer, a copy of the contract at issue. If you're not sure, err on the side of bringing everything; Kim will tell you what matters and what doesn't.

Questions to ask a citizenship attorney in your state

A short list to run through before you commit: How many citizenship matters have you handled in the last year? What's your fee structure? Who else in the office will work on this? What's your realistic estimate of timeline and range of outcomes? How do I reach you between meetings?

Fees & payment

Fees, payment methods, and consultation options for Kim

Kim discusses fees during intake so the arrangement fits the matter. Contingency, hourly, and flat-fee options are all common in citizenship practice — ask which fits.

Hourly rates, contingency fees, and flat-fee options

Every citizenship matter is priced differently. Simple document review might be a flat fee. Injury litigation is often contingency. Complex commercial disputes usually run hourly with a retainer. Kim confirms the model in the engagement letter before any work starts.

Payment methods and payment plans

Kim's office accepts standard payment methods. Ask about payment plans if the retainer is a stretch — many citizenship practices work with clients on structured schedules.

Frequently asked

Frequently asked questions about Kim Stagg

  • How much does it cost to hire Kim for a citizenship case?

    Cost depends on the type of matter, the fee model (contingency, flat, hourly), and how contested the case becomes. Kim walks through the likely range during the consult so there are no surprises.

  • Does Kim offer a free consultation?

    Kim charges for the initial consult; that fee is credited toward representation if you retain Kim's office. Some citizenship attorneys offer free consults — check Kim's current terms during booking.

  • How long do citizenship cases in this state typically take?

    Simple citizenship matters can wrap in a few weeks; disputed cases can run 6–18 months from intake to resolution, longer if the matter goes to trial. Kim gives a realistic estimate for your facts at the consult — vague answers here are a red flag.

  • Can Kim take my case if I'm outside the area?

    Kim evaluates matters case by case. If the venue is outside Kim's regular jurisdictions, the intake call will confirm whether direct representation or a referral makes more sense.

  • What should I bring to my first meeting with Kim?

    Bring every document that touches the dispute: contracts, correspondence, police or medical reports, filed pleadings, invoices, photographs, insurance letters. Also bring a written timeline of what happened, in your own words. Kim will filter what matters — over-preparing at intake is always cheaper than needing a second meeting.

  • Is Kim accepting new citizenship clients right now?

    Kim's intake status shifts week to week. Submit the form; the office will confirm availability or refer the matter out.