State of Legal AI in MENA 2026: Companies, Funding, and Gaps
A 2026 landscape of legal AI in MENA: named players across 8 countries, funding (HAQQ $3M leads), Harvey's entry via Al Tamimi — and the category no VC report tracks.
The Landscape
Ask most analysts about legal AI and you will hear about San Francisco and London. Ask about MENA and you will mostly hear silence. So we went looking — running live searches across the Gulf, Levant, and North Africa to find who is actually building.
The answer: more than the silence suggests. Saudi Arabia has an early cluster (Malakah, Shwra, Bynh, Baeynh, Signit). The UAE has Qanooni. Jordan has Arabic.AI, building Arabic-first legal models. Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain each have at least one named player. Egypt has a small marketplace cluster. And Lebanon has HAQQ.
The Funding Picture
HAQQ closed $3M in early 2026 — the largest disclosed round for a MENA-native legal-AI company. Malakah raised $600K in Saudi Arabia. Most other regional players have not disclosed a round. That makes HAQQ the best-funded legal-AI company built specifically for this region — and shows just how early the whole category is.
Who Is Entering
The global leaders have noticed. Harvey — valued at $11B after a 2026 round — partnered with Al Tamimi & Company, the region's largest firm, and is in use at Stephenson Harwood and CMS across their Middle East offices. We found no comparable regional footprint yet for Legora, Spellbook, Robin AI, or Luminance.
The pattern is familiar: global tools land first inside the biggest international firms. The 99% — solo practitioners, boutiques, in-house teams across the Gulf and Levant — are not their customer. That gap is the whole reason HAQQ exists.
What We See
A market nobody is measuring is a market nobody is serving well. The absence of a 'MENA legal tech' funding category is not proof there is no market — it is proof the market has been overlooked. We have 7,000+ clients telling us otherwise.
Building here is harder than building for New York: many jurisdictions, two scripts, Arabic legal sources that barely exist as structured data. But that difficulty is the moat. The tool that handles MENA's mess natively does not have to win a feature war with Harvey — it is solving a different problem for a different customer.
Key Takeaways
- Legal AI is live in at least 8 MENA countries.
- No VC report tracks MENA legal tech as a category.
- HAQQ ($3M) leads regional funding; Harvey entered via Al Tamimi.
- The overlooked market is the opportunity — and the moat is regional fluency.