About Eliot
Eliot Brais has practiced law in Massachusetts for decades. He earned a B.A. from Assumption College in 1982 and a J.D. from New England Law | Boston in 1987. Those credentials set the stage for a long career in local courts and community bar groups.
He began building a practice in the region after law school. Over the years his work moved between courtroom calendars, client meetings and the administrative demands of running a small firm. He carries the title of Managing Shareholder at Brais Law Office and has also operated under the name Law Offices of Eliot T. Brais. That mix of hands-on client work and firm management is part of how he organizes his days.
Brais has been active in bar organizations that serve the legal community in Bristol County. He holds membership in the Bristol County Bar Association. He also served as president of the Attleboro District Court Bar Association in 2005 and continues to participate in that association. Those roles have kept him engaged with colleagues across the district court system and given him steady exposure to procedural and practice developments.
His legal training in Boston came at a time when practical courtroom experience remained central to many local practices. The routines of motion practice, client counseling and courtroom appearances became familiar. He applied that training to a practice that includes managing the business side of a small law office as well as representing individuals in matters that bring them into Massachusetts courts.
Clients and colleagues describe Brais as a lawyer who manages an established local practice rather than as a public figure or law firm brand. He has stayed rooted in the same regional legal networks where he began his career after law school. That continuity has shaped the firm's steady operation and local reputation.
As of 2026 he maintains offices under the names Law Offices of Eliot T. Brais and Brais Law Office. He continues to practice in Massachusetts and focuses on representing clients in matters brought in state courts from those offices.