No free plan. The cheapest way in is Enterprise at Contact for pricing. Consider free alternatives in the legal & compliance category if budget is tight.
Legora and Harvey are the two leading AI legal platforms, both well-funded and targeting large law firms. Legora emphasizes structured workflows (Tabular Review, Playbooks) and deep DMS integration, while Harvey focuses more on conversational legal AI. Both have opaque enterprise pricing. Legora's Word add-in and workflow automation give it an edge for firms with established document-centric processes. The choice often depends on which platform integrates better with your existing infrastructure.
Legora doesn't publish pricing, and quotes vary significantly. Industry reports suggest initial per-seat quotes can be substantial (£200+ per lawyer), but aggressive negotiation has yielded discounts of 50-60%. The lack of pricing transparency is a common criticism of both Legora and its competitors in the legal AI space. Request a demo and negotiate — the first quote is rarely the final price.
Yes, Legora integrates with major legal DMS platforms including iManage and SharePoint. The Research function searches across your internal document repository alongside external legal databases. The Word add-in accesses your firm's document library for precedent-based drafting. DMS integration is a core part of the onboarding process.
Legora is primarily designed for mid-to-large law firms with enterprise sales processes and no self-serve plans. Small firms and solo practitioners would likely find the pricing prohibitive relative to their needs. Alternatives like CoCounsel (by Thomson Reuters), Casetext, or even ChatGPT with legal prompting may be more appropriate for smaller practices.
Legora was formerly known as Leya. The company rebranded to Legora as it expanded from its European origins into the U.S. market, raising $550 million in its Series D at a $5.55 billion valuation in March 2026.
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Last verified March 2026