About Tyler
Tyler Roberts built a steady legal path from business school into private practice. He earned a B.B.A. in 2007 from the University of Kentucky, where he studied management and marketing. He then attended the University of Mississippi School of Law and received his J.D. in 2011.
After law school, Roberts established himself in Kentucky. In 2012 he took on the role of managing lawyer at Roberts Law Office PLLC, a firm he has led since that year. The title reflects both administrative responsibility and a hands-on practice role. Colleagues describe him as methodical and practical in approach. He handles day-to-day case management and client intake while overseeing the office’s operations.
Roberts is admitted to practice in Kentucky and is also admitted to the Federal Circuit. Those admissions shape the matters he accepts and the courts in which he appears. He maintains current memberships in professional associations and participates in bar-related activities, keeping pace with developments that affect litigation and filings at the state and federal levels.
His office is based in Lexington. From there he manages a caseload that is coordinated with the filing requirements and appellate pathways available through his Federal Circuit admission. He balances courtroom preparation with the administrative duties of running a small firm. That mix informs how he staffs matters and allocates time for hearings, motions, and client consultations.
Roberts’s background in business helps inform his legal practice. Early academic work in management and marketing gave him a foundation for working with business clients and for translating legal issues into practical next steps. At the same time, his legal training at Mississippi reinforced the research and writing skills needed for appellate matters.
People who work with him note an unhurried communication style. He explains legal options in straightforward terms and maps procedural steps for clients who are unfamiliar with court processes. His role requires juggling case strategy with the day-to-day demands of running a firm, and he has prioritized systems that keep both dimensions moving.
He continues to work from his Lexington office, handling matters in Kentucky and in forums that accept filings through the Federal Circuit. His current practice centers on representing clients in those jurisdictions.