About Aaron J.
Aaron J. Lytle earned his J.D. from the University of Akron in 1997 and completed an M.B.A. in finance at the same university in 1998. He began his undergraduate studies at Miami University of Ohio, graduating in 1992 with a B.A. in Public Administration. Those academic steps put legal training and business education side by side early in his career.
Before entering private practice, Lytle worked in corporate finance. In 2000 he served as Vice President of Corporate Finance for American Express Tax and Business Services. That role involved financial oversight within a large corporate environment and provided exposure to taxation and business operations on a national scale.
Lytle moved into law practice after his time in corporate finance. In 2004 he joined Ritt and Lytle, P.C. as a lawyer. His resume combines courtroom and transactional threads, reflecting both the professional training he received in law school and several years handling corporate financial work.
He is admitted to practice in Illinois and holds memberships in several professional groups. Those include the Kane County Bar Association and Wealth Counsel, Illinois. Wealth Counsel is an association for attorneys who advise on estate planning and related matters, and the Kane County Bar provides a local professional network and resources for practicing lawyers.
Colleagues and clients say Lytle brings a practical approach to legal problems. He tends to frame legal questions in terms of business and financial consequences. That perspective informs how he evaluates risk and proposes solutions. He has experience preparing legal documents, advising on business-related matters and engaging with tax and estate planning issues that intersect with corporate concerns.
Today Lytle practices law in Illinois and maintains memberships that reflect his interest in both local bar work and estate-planning issues at the state level. His current practice combines legal representation and financial insight to address clients’ business and personal planning needs.