About Nayef
Nayef Mubarak built a legal career rooted in two different disciplines. He earned a B.S. in Business Administration and Finance from the University of Central Florida and later took his law degree from Barry University. The combination of business training and legal education gave him a steady foundation for work that often intersects law and community needs.
Long before he became a partner at a private firm, Mubarak was active in community immigration work. Since 2002 he has served as Immigration Director at the Arab American Community Center. In that role he has worked directly with individuals and families on paperwork and procedural questions, and he has remained connected to local community needs for more than two decades.
Mubarak joined the Florida Bar in 2010. He moved into private practice the following year when he became an associate at NeJame Law in 2011. He spent several years there, and the firm elevated him to partner in 2014. During his time at NeJame Law he handled a range of immigration matters and represented clients before administrative bodies and in court proceedings.
Professional association work has been a steady part of Mubarak’s calendar. He has been a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association since 2011, and he took on the additional role of Media Liaison for AILA’s Central Florida chapter in 2013, a post he continues to hold. Those positions have kept him visible in professional networks and connected to developments in immigration practice and policy.
The arc of Mubarak’s career — community service, firm practice, and association involvement — led him to open his own office, Mubarak Law. He continues to operate there, drawing on years of experience in both nonprofit and private settings. His practice addresses immigration-related legal needs and serves a clientele that includes individuals and families navigating the immigration system.
Colleagues describe him as steady and pragmatic in client work, and clients have relied on his experience for long-running cases that require persistence. He remains active in the Florida Bar and in AILA, maintaining professional ties that inform his daily practice. Today he manages cases from his office at Mubarak Law and continues to practice immigration law.