Each assignment is unique, with its own timeline and size, meaning standard and expedited turn times will vary upon your requirements balanced with current workload, so please contact to discuss your specific needs.
Standard Delivery: $4.30 per page. For estimating purposes 1 hour of recorded proceedings results in 40 pages (.66 pages per minute) of double spaced transcript.
Expedited Delivery: $6.35 per page. Less than seven working days and this is a starting point. Every request is unique and timing/fees are open to negotiation.
Short Audio (typically 25 pages/37 minutes or less) Minimum Fees:
$150 standard delivery.
$195 expedited.
Your final invoice for minimums will be reflect either the minimum fee or per page rate, whichever is more.
Short recordings take as much time to set up as multiple day trials and are often in formats that require converting. These tasks take time, necessitating a baseline cost no matter how short the recording.
Certified in King, Kitsap, Mason, Pierce, Snohomish, Franklin, Benton, Whitman, Spokane, Lincoln counties. Many counties do not have an approved transcriptionist list and FTR is able to produce a verbatim report of proceedings for appellate or other purposes.
Additionally, district courts do not have approved transcriber lists.
Expedited Delivery: $6.35 per page. Less than seven working days and this is a starting point. Every request is unique and timing/fees are open to negotiation.
Short Audio (typically 25 pages/37 minutes or less) Minimum Fees:
$150 standard delivery.
$195 expedited.
Your final invoice for minimums will be reflect either the minimum fee or per page rate, whichever is more.
Short recordings take as much time to set up as multiple day trials and are often in formats that require converting. These tasks take time, necessitating a baseline cost no matter how short the recording.
Certified in King, Kitsap, Mason, Pierce, Snohomish, Franklin, Benton, Whitman, Spokane, Lincoln counties. Many counties do not have an approved transcriptionist list and FTR is able to produce a verbatim report of proceedings for appellate or other purposes.
Additionally, district courts do not have approved transcriber lists.