Pexels: lawyer using AI legal softwareš· Photo by Sora Shimazaki on Pexels
- ā AI adoption beyond fake case citations
- ā Efficiency gains in legal research and contracts
- ā Firms prioritize compliance over hype
Law firms are finally moving past the embarrassment of AI-generated fake case citations. Tools like Casetextās CoCounsel and Harvey AI are now being used for legal research, document analysis, and contract reviewātasks that actually save billable hours. The shift isnāt just about avoiding PR disasters; itās about firms quietly integrating AI into workflows where it can reduce errors and cut costs.
But donāt mistake this for a revolution. The adoption is still piecemeal, with most firms testing AI in low-risk areas like due diligence or e-discovery. A 2023 Thomson Reuters survey found only 15% of law firms had adopted generative AI, though 60% were exploring it. The real story isnāt how many firms are using AIāitās how few are using it for anything beyond basic automation.
The hype cycle hasnāt disappeared; itās just been repackaged. Vendors now sell AI as a compliance tool, a contract reviewer, or a predictive analytics engine. The pitch is less about replacing lawyers and more about making them slightly less inefficient. For now, thatās enough to justify the investmentābut only if the tools deliver on the demo promises.
The gap between AI demos and law firm deployment
Pexels: lawyer using AI legal softwareš· Photo by KATRIN BOLOVTSOVA on Pexels
The competitive advantage isnāt in having AI; itās in using it well. Firms that integrate AI into core workflowsālike Latham & Watkinsā AI task forceāare seeing measurable gains in speed and accuracy. Meanwhile, smaller firms risk falling behind if they canāt afford the tools or the training to use them effectively. The market is splitting into those who treat AI as a strategic asset and those who see it as a checkbox.
Developer activity tells a different story. GitHub repositories for legal AI tools are growing, but most are still experimental. The OpenLLM leaderboard shows legal-specific models lagging behind general-purpose ones, suggesting the industry is still in the early stages of customization. Thatās a problem for firms expecting off-the-shelf solutions to solve complex legal problems.
The reality gap is widening. AI can draft a contract clause in seconds, but it canāt yet navigate the nuances of a high-stakes negotiation. Firms that over-rely on AI for substantive work risk compliance failures or client pushback. The smart money is on tools that augment lawyers, not replace themāat least until the next wave of hype arrives.
The real signal here is that AI adoption in law is no longer about flashy demosāitās about incremental improvements in workflows. Firms that focus on measurable outcomes, like reduced review times or fewer errors, will outpace those chasing the latest AI buzzword. The tools are getting better, but the bottleneck remains human oversight.

