About Tyler
Tyler Hoffer studied history at the University of Cincinnati before turning to law at the University of Dayton School of Law. His academic path combined a liberal arts perspective with professional training. As a law student he worked as a research assistant and legal assistant, which gave him early exposure to casework and legal writing.
His first roles in the legal field were support positions that involved day-to-day courthouse work and client contact. In 2012 he worked as a legal assistant at Gregory S. Young Co., L.P.A. The next year he served as a research assistant to Paul Moke, a law professor, where he handled citation work and background research for academic and case materials.
Hoffer gained hands-on experience inside law offices and clinics while still in school. He was a licensed intern in an Intellectual Property Law Clinic in 2015, and he clerked that year for Combs, Schaefer, Atkins, and Little. Earlier, in 2014, he clerked for Patricia Campbell, who served as both a prosecuting lawyer for the Greene County Treasurer and a municipal law attorney. Those roles exposed him to municipal matters, administrative procedure, and practical courtroom processes.
After graduation and additional clerking, Hoffer joined George & Underwood, LLP, in 2016 as a law clerk and later worked there as a lawyer. He moved from clerkship duties into responsibilities that included drafting pleadings, conducting discovery, and advising clients on procedural and substantive issues. In 2019 he established Hoffer Law, LLC. As the owner, he runs the small firm’s daily operations and manages client matters from intake through resolution.
Across his career Hoffer has handled municipal and administrative matters, participated in an intellectual property clinic, and built experience in civil litigation tasks typical of local practice. He has balanced legal research and courtroom work, and he has maintained a practice licensed in Ohio. He now concentrates his practice on client representation in state-level matters and municipal law in Ohio.