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We Downloaded 110 AI Lawyer Apps So You Don't Have To

By HAQQ Team · · 13 min read · Ai-legal-tech

We mapped ~110 consumer AI lawyer apps across the App Store and Google Play. The category is louder than it is good — and only 1 tells you its AI model.

Open the App Store and search 'AI lawyer.' You'll get a wall of apps with near-identical names — *AI Lawyer*, *AI Lawyer – Law Help*, *AI Legal Assistant*, *AI Lawyer: Legal Assistant* — most with a gavel icon and a confident promise to answer any legal question for $9.99 a week.

We wanted to know what was actually behind that wall. So over a few days we did the unglamorous thing: we mapped the entire consumer field. Apple App Store, Google Play, and the web products that feed them. After de-duplicating the same apps listed under three developer names, we landed at roughly **110 distinct products**. Here's what we learned — and why, at the end of it, we shipped our own.

Two markets wearing one name

Search 'best AI lawyer app' and every result on the first page is a listicle — from Clio, Spellbook, Smokeball, Ironclad, ContractSafe. We read them so you don't have to either. They all rank the same handful of enterprise products: Harvey, Spellbook, CoCounsel, Lexis+ AI, Clio's Manage AI.

These are extraordinary tools. They are also completely irrelevant to you, unless 'you' are a 200-lawyer firm with a procurement team. Harvey runs about **$1,000+ per seat per month** and sells on six-month enterprise cycles. You cannot download it. There is no consumer version.

So there are two markets wearing the same name: the one search engines show you (enterprise legal AI) and the one you can actually install (consumer legal AI). Almost nobody writes honestly about the second. That's the gap this post fills — and if you want the professional, firm-side picture instead, we covered [the MENA market landscape separately](/blog/legal-ai-mena-2026).

How we mapped 110 apps

The method was deliberately boring. We ran exhaustive searches across both stores in multiple languages — English, Arabic, Spanish, Hindi, Portuguese — because the App Store you see in San Francisco is not the one a user sees in Cairo or São Paulo. We pulled every app calling itself an AI lawyer, legal assistant, or legal-document generator, plus the web platforms behind the mobile listings.

Then we de-duplicated. The same product is often listed three times — once per developer entity, once per regional store, once with a slightly different name. We argued internally about where the line sat between 'an AI lawyer app' and 'a directory that books you a human.' We kept both, but labelled them, because a chatbot and a marketplace are very different promises. The number that survived: about **110 distinct products**.

Finding 1: The graveyard

The consumer side is a long tail, and most of the tail is dead or dying. Dozens of apps have **fewer than 100 ratings**, a single individual listed as the developer, and a 'last updated' date 12–24 months in the past. We found apps with one 5-star review (often suspiciously the only review), apps that claim '150+ countries' run by a solo dev, and at least one app that presents itself as a global legal assistant but quietly only covers a single country's law — without saying so until you've paid.

A few real ones rise above it:

And then the incumbents — **Rocket Lawyer** and **LegalZoom** — with roughly 25 million users each and real attorney networks. But they're document-and-forms platforms retrofitting AI onto a 20-year-old core, and they're effectively US-only. The pattern is hard to miss: the apps with real traction are either single-country, not-really-AI, or both. The genuinely AI-native, genuinely multi-country consumer apps are tiny.

The consumer field, compared

Here's the meaningful slice of the ~110 — the apps with real traction, the incumbents, and the emerging-market breakouts — side by side. (We left out ~70 sub-100-rating long-tail apps; they're in the dataset, not the table.) HAQQ is in there too, newest of the bunch.

Notice the last column. '?' / 'Undisclosed' is the modal answer. One row — Ideas All Day — names GPT-4o; one row names a proprietary engine on the record (ours). Everything else is a black box.

Finding 2: Nobody will tell you what's inside

This is the one that stopped us.

Of ~110 apps, **exactly one** — a small UK app called *AI Lawyer: Legal Documents* — discloses the model it runs on (GPT-4o). Everyone else says some version of 'powered by advanced AI' and leaves it there.

Think about what that means. You're asking software for legal guidance — possibly the highest-stakes question a consumer ever types into a phone — and 109 out of 110 apps won't tell you whether there's a frontier model behind the curtain or a thin wrapper around a cheap API with a system prompt that says 'act like a lawyer.'

This isn't pedantry. In 2025 the US Federal Trade Commission fined **DoNotPay $193,000** and barred it from marketing itself as a 'robot lawyer,' because it couldn't back the claim that its AI performed like a human one. Opacity is exactly how you end up there. And it compounds with a second risk: hallucination — when a model confidently invents a law or a case that doesn't exist. We dug into how often that actually happens in our [audit of 1,458 court cases with fabricated AI citations](/blog/ai-legal-hallucination-audit). A category that won't say what it's made of is a category that hasn't earned trust yet.

Finding 3: The price of a pocket lawyer

Pricing clusters tightly. The consumer sweet spot is **$9.99–$19.99/month**, usually with a $4.99–$9.99 weekly plan engineered to catch an anxious impulse subscribe at 11pm. A handful go premium ($35–40/mo, the Rocket Lawyer tier). One charges a refreshing $0.99, once.

But the most interesting pricing is at the bottom of the market, in places the App Store charts never show you. South Africa's **My AI Lawyer** runs on WhatsApp for about **$2.60 a month** and won a Microsoft award doing it. India's **NyayGuru** reached 300,000+ users by working in Hindi. Brazil's **Enter** just tripled its valuation to **$1.2 billion** building legal AI for a market Silicon Valley wasn't watching.

The lesson we took: in emerging markets, the channel and the language matter more than the App Store ranking. A free WhatsApp bot in the right language beats a polished $19.99 app in the wrong one.

Finding 4: The map has holes

Geography is where the category falls apart. The Western incumbents — Rocket Lawyer, LegalZoom, DoNotPay — are effectively US-only. The biggest app by installs is Spain-only. The most credible regional players are locked to one country each: Adel and Shwra to Saudi Arabia, LegalMind to Egypt. The breakout growth stories — Enter in Brazil, NyayGuru in India, My AI Lawyer in South Africa — are all native-language plays in markets the global charts ignore.

Read that list again and a pattern emerges. The apps that win do it by going deep in *one* place and *one* language. Almost nobody is trying to be genuinely multi-jurisdiction for a consumer — to answer a question about Egyptian law and UAE law and French law from the same phone, in the user's own language. That's hard, and hard is exactly where the open space tends to be.

Finding 5: The empty quadrant

Plot the whole field on two axes — does it work in the user's native language, and is it built mobile-first for a consumer rather than a firm — and a hole opens up. Almost everything good is missing at least one corner. Harvey is brilliant and English and for firms. Alex AI is native and consumer and stuck in one country. The incumbents are consumer and English and US-only. The corner where it's *your* language, on *your* phone, across *more than one* country's law — that one is nearly empty.

What we did about it

Full disclosure, because this is a company blog and you should discount accordingly: we build HAQQ Legal AI, and we just shipped a consumer app into exactly that empty corner. It's live on the App Store now; Android is coming.

We're not going to pretend the map crowns us. As we write this, our app is **one rating old**. Alex AI has 270,000 installs; we have a launch and a hypothesis. That's the honest standing.

But here's why we built it anyway, and why we think the quadrant matters more than the leaderboard. We run our own legal engine — we call it **Justinian** — because after mapping this field we decided we never wanted to be app #110 that won't say what's inside. We work in Arabic natively, right-to-left, not as a translation layer bolted onto an English model. And we cover legal systems across MENA and beyond rather than betting the company on one country. Arabic is genuinely hard for AI to do well — hard enough that we wrote a [whole second post about who's actually solving it](/blog/arabic-ai-lawyer-app).

We argued internally about whether to publish this map at all — it names competitors who, on several dimensions, are ahead of us today. We decided that a category drowning in 'powered by AI' needs someone willing to just show the data. So here it is.

Key takeaways

Sources & further reading