Legal tech absorbed record VC investment last year – a blunt signal that capital, not opinion, is the clearest market validation that exists.
ENTRY ANGLES
AI-powered legal platforms for document-heavy, research-intensive legal work · Outcome-based business models where platform takes percentage of successful case recovery · AI automation of consumer claims and refund pursuit (e.g., price protection monitoring)
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
AI/machine learning for document analysis and case research, Automated claims processing and legal filing systems, Data accumulation and analytics capabilities
JUSTPOINT FOUNDER
“modern justice for the modern world”
Justpoint pitches "modern justice for the modern world" – a platform that helps consumers pursue personal injury claims and recover compensation for harm they've suffered.
The startup has focused its initial scope on medical injury: adverse drug reactions (including harm to the fetus during pregnancy), defectively designed or manufactured devices and pharmaceuticals, medical malpractice, and environmental contamination.
The platform operates as a marketplace that matches claimants with attorneys best suited to represent their specific case. More than a thousand attorneys are currently connected to the platform.
The process begins with a free online intake, where a Justpoint specialist learns the details of the claimant's situation and collects supporting documentation. A team of experts then reviews the materials, and if the case has merit, produces a legal action plan. If the claimant approves, Justpoint finds a matched attorney from its network – one with relevant case experience – who prepares and files the claim and manages the litigation.
Justpoint earns revenue only on successful outcomes. When a claimant wins and collects a settlement, Justpoint receives a share of the attorney's contingency fee – which itself represents a significant percentage of the total compensation.
Interestingly, this fee-sharing structure only became fully legal across the US recently, following Arizona's 2021 reform allowing non-attorneys to receive direct percentage-based compensation from legal fees.
A purpose-built AI system – trained on a large corpus of cases in the relevant domains – sits at the center of the platform's intake and evaluation process. The same AI is then available to the attorney who takes the case, accelerating preparation and analysis throughout the litigation.
The results are striking. Justpoint claimants have received compensation averaging more than three times the market rate for comparable cases.
The startup has helped more than 13,000 claimants successfully resolve their cases. Based on available signals, average settlements are around $355,000.
Justpoint just closed $95M in new financing – $50M of which is debt – bringing total funding to $153M. The company had previously raised $50M in debt in 2021.
Justpoint was founded in 2018, initially building a database of pharmaceutical compounds and ingredient interactions associated with adverse health outcomes. Access was sold to both drug manufacturers and attorneys handling harm-related cases.
Over time, the founders concluded that database access alone wasn't the right business – and pivoted to building the full-service platform for claimants and attorneys.
This pattern of starting with a database and expanding into a full-service transactional layer is worth noting. A similar arc played out at OffDeal ([related review](/review/vygodnee-prodavat-ne-instrument-a-rezultat)), which entered Y Combinator building a database of regional businesses likely to attract acquisition interest from national operators or private equity funds.
After graduation, OffDeal raised $4.6M to evolve into an AI investment bank – not just finding businesses, but managing and closing acquisition deals to earn transaction commissions. Later it shifted to the sell side, helping local businesses find acquirers, again as a deal service rather than a search tool.
The pattern is consistent: databases naturally evolve into services, because the economics of access fees are much weaker than the economics of transaction fees. If your data helps close deals, take a cut of the deal.
Justpoint is reviving its database in a new form – this time as a consumer-facing marketing tool. Anyone can look up whether a drug they're taking has known harmful interactions. If it does, a single click connects them to Justpoint to explore whether they have a claim. The database that was once a B2B product becomes a funnel for the B2C service.
Lawhive ([related review](/review/dva-bolshih-pljusa-esli-ne-prodavat-ego-otdelno)) in the UK operates on a similar model – consumers and small businesses submit cases, the platform matches them with the right attorney through an internal marketplace, and the AI assists with case intake, attorney matching, and materials preparation. The case mix is broader: tax and debt disputes, landlord problems, property rights, divorce and asset division, employment claims, and estate planning. Lawhive has raised $54.2M, including $40M in a single round last December.
AI is well suited to the document-heavy, research-intensive work of legal practice.
The broad direction is AI-powered legal platforms. Gartner estimates that market will reach $50B by 2027 as AI adoption accelerates across the profession. Investors have already taken notice: funding into legal technology startups reached a record $2.5B in 2024.
A more specific direction: platforms built around outcome-based business models, where the platform earns a share of successful case recovery rather than charging flat fees.
Justpoint and Lawhive represent the sophisticated end of the spectrum. But simpler approaches are also gaining traction.
Pap! ([related review](/review/zavlech-sobrat-i-dvazhdy-zarabotat)) built a platform where consumers forward their purchase receipts, and an AI engine monitors whether the retailer drops the price within the store's price-protection window. If a price drop is detected, the AI automatically files a claim and pursues the refund. The platform keeps 20% of recovered amounts. As a byproduct, the platform accumulates purchasing data that can support a separate marketing analytics service.
Pap! came out of Y Combinator last fall and raised $1.8M a month later.
Ajust ([related review](/review/udivitelnyj-sposob-zavoevat-ljubov-klienta)), an Australian startup that raised $1.75M, built an AI assistant that helps consumers write and submit complaints to retailers, mobile carriers, internet providers, airlines, and other companies. The complaint-drafting service is free, including when the complaint results in compensation. For cases where the consumer is unsatisfied with the company's response, Ajust connects them with attorneys – and in that arrangement, takes a share of any recovery. It also sells the same platform to companies, helping them receive better-structured complaints and reduce resolution costs.
Legal is a large and structurally complex domain, and AI is applicable throughout it. The technology direction is well established. What remains is picking a niche and a business model – and moving fast enough to establish a position before the obvious opportunities are taken.