It’s more or less impossible to not keep an eye on the career of Sacramento attorney Anh Phoong these days.

Phoong has become known in recent years for her ubiquitous marketing. Her firm’s billboards are frequently spotted around Northern California, as is her catchphrase “Something wrong? Call Anh Phoong.”

This empire is manifesting in different ways. Phoong’s growing firm now has 14 attorneys and close to 100 employees, with offices in three states.

She also relocated her Sacramento base of operations in recent months from Land Park to offices near Watt Avenue and Highway 50 in La Riviera.

Of her new Sacramento-area offices, Phoong said she and her staff love them.

“We have tons of parking space and we have tons … more square footage for the office,” Phoong said.

The firm also has a newly opened Texas office, and locations in San Francisco and Las Vegas.

Anh Phoong’s success

Phoong is a personal injury attorney who has been licensed to practice law since 2012, according to the website for the State Bar of California.

One person keeping an eye on Phoong’s work is Greater Sacramento Economic Council president and CEO Barry Broome.

“It’s great that she’s building a national brand for herself,” Broome said. “It’s exciting to see a young woman build an empire.”

Asked the secret of Phoong’s success, Broome said that she was extremely charismatic and that she was also “a good lawyer” who delivered for clients.

Phoong’s personal code is to “go all in,” as she explained to The Bee in 2024. At that time, she recalled the attitude she’d had when she was looking to study at Lincoln Law School.

“I just knew how to give it my all,” Phoong said then. “I was like, ’If I’m going to do this, I’m going to really do this.’”

Plans for Phoong’s former Land Park buildings

The two Land Park buildings on Riverside Boulevard where Phoong’s firm was previously located sat on the market for several months. This includes a building at 2725 Riverside Blvd. which was constructed in 2009 and has a mid-century modern look.

The building had served as executive suites before Phoong bought it. She said the firm tried to sell the building, even dropping the price, without success.

“We just talked to our Realtor and we’re like, ‘Hey, it’s been over six months. We can’t sell this thing,’” Phoong said.

Real estate broker Ryker Flint, who is handling leasing for the building, said it could end up as a coworking space.

“There are, I think, attorneys out there that want to be related and are related and work with Anh Phoong,” Flint said. “So that might be a natural fit. It wouldn’t necessarily have to be that, but it might draw in more attorneys to sort of be in the same area.”

Phoong is still trying to sell the other Land Park building at 1113 Castro Way.

Vehicles drive past one of attorney Anh Phoong’s ubiquitous billboards, emblazoned with her “Something wrong?” tagline and touting her connection with the Sacramento Kings, on Arden Way in 2024. Vehicles drive past one of attorney Anh Phoong’s ubiquitous billboards, emblazoned with her “Something wrong?” tagline and touting her connection with the Sacramento Kings, on Arden Way in 2024. NATHANIEL LEVINE Sacramento Bee file Returning to her roots

When Phoong was starting her firm, she used a spare bedroom of a Fair Oaks home and rented 1,000 square feet of flexible office space.

She would like to help people following a similar path.

“If it’s like a first-time entrepreneur or small business and they need to launch something and they needed space, I love the idea that that’s where it would happen,” Phoong said.

One thing that might not change in the near future: Phoong’s name being emblazoned on her Land Park building.

“It would only be if another law firm wanted her name off of there,” Flint said. “If they had enough of the space, she would be open to that. But there’s a cost related to taking them down, too. So why bother taking them down unless there’s a need for that?”

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Graham Womack

The Sacramento Bee

Graham Womack is a general assignment reporter for The Sacramento Bee. Prior to joining The Bee full-time in September 2025, he freelanced for the publication for several years. His work has won several California Journalism Awards and spurred state legislation.