Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati


Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati is an American multinational law firm specializing in business, securities, venture capital, and intellectual property law. Headquartered in Palo Alto, California, the firm's clients are primarily technology companies, life science firms, emerging industries, venture capital firms, private equity establishments, and investment banks.

Offices

The firm is headquartered in Palo Alto. Wilson Sonsini has 12 additional offices in the United States: Austin; Boston; Boulder; Los Angeles (Century City); Los Angeles (Downtown); New York; Salt Lake City; San Diego; San Francisco (Financial District); Seattle; Washington, D.C.; and Wilmington, Delaware. The firm has 4 offices abroad in Hong Kong; Shanghai, China; Brussels, Belgium; and London, England.

History

Wilson Sonsini was founded in 1961 as McCloskey, Wilson & Mosher in Palo Alto, California, with attorneys Paul N. "Pete" McCloskey Jr., John Arnot Wilson, and Roger Laurence Mosher as the name partners. The firm since launch has primarily been focused on the representation of emerging technology companies and venture capitalists. Lawrence W. "Larry" Sonsini joined the firm in 1966 and after McCloskey left for Congress the firm became Wilson, Mosher & Sonsini. In 1969, the firm helped form Mayfield Fund, a venture capital firm.
In 1978, name partner Roger L. Mosher broke off, taking a portion of the firm with him, and the firm adopted its current name of Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, PC. On November 6, 2019, in conjunction with the launch of a new company website, the firm started to use the shortened name, "Wilson Sonsini".
In 1980, Wilson Sonsini represented Apple Inc. in its initial public offering. The firm was also involved in representing companies in the semiconductor industry like, LSI Logic, Altera, Cirrus Logic, Lattice Semiconductor, and Cypress Semiconductor.
In late 1998, the firm opened its first national office, in Kirkland, Washington, led by partner Patrick Schultheis. Within the next few years, the firm opened offices in Austin, Texas; San Francisco; Northern Virginia; New York; and San Diego. In 2005, Wilson Sonsini launched an office in China and enhanced its New York office. In 2006 the firm relocated its Northern Virginia lawyers to Washington, D.C., to be closer to government regulators and the firm eventually moved its Kirkland office to Seattle. The firm also opened offices in Los Angeles, Boston, Wilmington, Delaware, Salt Lake City, Utah, and Boulder, Colorado. Internationally, the firm has offices in London, Brussels, Beijing, Hong Kong, and Shanghai.
In 1994, Wilson Sonsini represented Netscape Communications in its IPO, in addition to representing several other companies that, like Netscape, Infoseek, USWeb/CKS, and Inktomi.
In 1999, when VA Linux went public, the firm reaped $24.5 million as the value of the 100,000 shares that the firm held ballooned in value. Other IPOs that enriched the firm because of its equity stake were those of Ask Jeeves, Google, and online grocer Webvan. With the downturn in the dotcom economy, however, Wilson Sonsini had to make a number of adjustments; 100 support staff and 60 associates were laid off—about 10% of its attorneys. Better times eventually returned. In 2004, the firm advised Google on its $2.7 billion IPO.
In February 2005, the firm announced that Larry Sonsini, 64, who had been chief executive for more than 20 years, stepped aside, and named John Roos, a 20-year veteran partner who had led representations of young companies and entrepreneurs, as chief executive officer.
After becoming CEO, Roos steered Wilson Sonsini beyond the burst tech bubble toward a broader client portfolio and a global presence.
In 2009, after President Obama appointed Roos as U.S. Ambassador to Japan, Steven E. Bochner, a 28 year veteran partner at the firm, succeeded Roos as CEO.
In 2016, Wilson Sonsini represented LinkedIn acquisition by Microsoft at a price of US$26.2 billion.
Wilson Sonsini represented Twitter in the transaction involving Elon Musk's $44 billion take-private bid.
In May 2025, Wilson Sonsini sold SixFifty, its legal tech unit, to Paychex, an American payment technology company, in an all-cash deal worth between $70 million and $85 million.
Wilson Sonsini is also serving as outside counsel for Google in its antitrust litigation before the U.S. Department of Justice. The firm’s partner Susan Creighton, a longtime advisor to Google, contributed to an internal memo at Netscape that helped prompt the U.S. DOJ’s investigation of Microsoft in the 1990s. Creighton also led outside counsel efforts during Google’s 2013 settlement of an FTC antitrust inquiry.

Notable people

Some of the more notable current and former Wilson Sonsini attorneys include:

Recognition

In 2025, the firm was recognized with the NLADA's Beacon of Justice award for their work related to sustaining equal justice.