General Legal — The AI-Native Law Firm That's Not a Copilot, It's the Lawyer
There are two kinds of legal AI startups. The first kind sells you a copilot: a chatbot that sits alongside your lawyer, helping them work faster while they still charge $800 an hour. The second kind is more radical: it replaces the billing model entirely. General Legal is the second kind.
Founded by the team that literally built CoCounsel — Thomson Reuters' flagship legal AI product — General Legal is not a software tool for lawyers. It is a law firm. A licensed, practicing, deal-closing law firm. And its attorneys are backed by AI so deep in the workflow that a contract review that once cost $2,000 now costs $500, delivered in under an hour.
That distinction matters more than it sounds. Every other LegalTech startup has to sell into law firms — notoriously conservative institutions that treat "AI assistance" as a threat to billable hours. General Legal sidesteps that GTM nightmare entirely. They are the law firm.
What They Actually Build
General Legal focuses on commercial contracting for growth-stage startups. That's a deliberately narrow wedge: MSAs, NDAs, DPAs, vendor agreements, TOSs, EULAs. The standard commercial paper that every B2B company deals with constantly, and that traditional law firms use to print money.
Their pricing is flat: $500 per contract. Turnaround is one hour for simple reviews, guaranteed under three hours for initial turns. Compare that to the typical startup experience: $1,000–$5,000 per contract, three to five business days, and a junior associate doing most of the work anyway while a partner takes 20% of the credit on the invoice.
The product is delivered primarily via Slack. Clients drop a contract in, tag the General Legal channel, and get back a redlined version with attorney commentary. The interface is not a portal — it is the tool every startup already lives in. That is a smart product decision that removes adoption friction entirely.
Their ICP is deliberately narrow: growth-stage companies (Series A to B range) doing recurring commercial contracts. Not pre-seed founders who need equity documents, not Fortune 500 procurement departments with in-house counsel. Companies that are big enough to have a real contract volume but small enough that a full-time GC is not cost-justified yet. It is a genuinely underserved wedge.
Who Built This and Why It's Different
The founding team is what makes General Legal credible rather than just another "lawyers + GPT" experiment.
