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Spellbook AI Reviews 2026: Pricing, Features, and Spellbook Alternatives

By Stephane Boghossian · · 12 min read · Ai-legal-tech

An independent 2026 review of Spellbook AI: pricing, Word add-in features, the LLM it uses, who owns it, and how it compares to HAQQ and other Spellbook alternatives like Legora, Harvey and CoCounsel.

Legal AI is not one category anymore.

What used to be "AI for lawyers" is splitting into multiple product types:

Spellbook and HAQQ Legal AI sit in this space, but they solve very different problems.

This article looks at what each system actually does, where it fits, and where it doesn't.

What Spellbook Is

Spellbook is an AI contract drafting and review assistant built primarily for Microsoft Word.

The product focuses on helping lawyers work faster inside the document editor they already use.

Core capabilities typically include:

Spellbook positions itself as an AI co-pilot embedded in Word rather than a standalone legal system.

Most workflows revolve around editing or generating contract language directly inside a document.

That positioning matters.

Spellbook is designed to make contract work faster, not to manage an entire legal practice.

What HAQQ Legal AI Is

HAQQ Legal AI is built as a legal operating system with AI built into it, not just a drafting assistant.

The platform combines:

The AI runs inside the firm's operational context.

That means the system can use information such as:

Instead of generating isolated text, the system produces work tied to actual legal matters and workflows.

HAQQ Legal AI is a legal system with AI built into it… combining matters, clients, documents, deadlines, billing, and AI reasoning into a single environment.

In practice, this means the AI operates within the firm's legal infrastructure rather than outside it.

The Core Architectural Difference

The biggest difference between the two products is not accuracy or models.

It is architecture.

Spellbook improves a specific task.

HAQQ Legal AI attempts to model how legal work actually happens.

Spellbook's Strengths

Spellbook is good at what it was built for.

1. Deep Word Integration

Many lawyers still work almost entirely in Microsoft Word. Spellbook meets them where they already are.

Instead of forcing new software, the AI works directly in the drafting environment lawyers know.

For transactional lawyers reviewing dozens of contracts per week, this can save time.

2. Focused Feature Set

Spellbook is focused on one problem: contract drafting and review.

That focus makes it easier to adopt. There is less system complexity than a full legal platform.

3. Learning from Precedents

Recent features such as the Spellbook Library allow the system to learn from a firm's existing documents and drafting patterns.

This helps the AI generate language closer to the firm's style and preferences.

For transactional teams with strong precedent libraries, this can be useful.

Spellbook's Limitations

Spellbook's limitations come mostly from the same design decisions that make it simple.

1. It Operates at the Document Level

Spellbook understands a contract. It does not understand the entire matter behind that contract.

It does not track:

So the AI cannot reason across the broader legal workflow.

2. It Is Not a Practice Management System

Spellbook does not replace: practice management software, document management systems, CRM tools, or billing platforms.

Most firms using Spellbook still rely on multiple tools.

3. It Is Largely Limited to Contract Workflows

Spellbook is strongest for transactional lawyers, contract review teams, and procurement legal teams.

It is less relevant for litigators, compliance teams, legal operations teams, and firms managing large case portfolios.

HAQQ Legal AI's Strengths

HAQQ Legal AI approaches legal AI from the opposite direction. Instead of starting with documents, it starts with legal infrastructure.

1. AI Inside the Legal Workflow

The platform integrates AI into the operational layer of legal work.

That includes:

This structure allows the AI to operate with context rather than isolated prompts.

Every action inside the system creates structured contextual data that allows the AI Twin to model how the firm thinks and works.

2. Structured Legal Reasoning

HAQQ focuses on producing structured legal deliverables.

Examples include:

In demonstrations, the system generates long-form legal analyses formatted like professional legal deliverables rather than simple summaries.

3. End-to-End Platform

HAQQ consolidates multiple legal systems into one platform:

The goal is not just faster drafting but running a law firm on one system.

HAQQ Legal AI's Limitations

No system escapes tradeoffs.

1. Higher Implementation Complexity

Full platforms require setup. Firms need to configure matters, document structures, internal workflows, and templates.

Compared to a Word plugin, this takes more effort.

2. Larger Scope

Spellbook solves a specific task. HAQQ attempts to cover the entire legal lifecycle.

That broader scope means the product may be heavier than what a small transactional team needs.

Where Each Tool Fits

The choice between these tools depends on what problem a firm is trying to solve.

The Bigger Trend in Legal AI

The difference between Spellbook and HAQQ reflects a larger split in the legal AI market.

Two models are emerging:

The Bottom Line

Spellbook and HAQQ Legal AI are not direct competitors in the traditional sense.

They represent two different philosophies.

Spellbook improves documents. HAQQ Legal AI attempts to model legal work itself.

Both approaches have value depending on the structure and needs of the legal team.

The legal AI market is still early. And the next few years will likely determine whether lawyers prefer AI embedded inside familiar tools or AI embedded inside entirely new legal systems.