Tools

Introduction
This page organizes artificial intelligence tools commonly encountered in legal practice. The categories below separate tools designed specifically for lawyers from general purpose systems that lawyers frequently use in research, drafting, automation, and knowledge management.
Each section links to a detailed directory describing the platforms, their typical use cases, and practical considerations for professional use.
Because many of these systems process client information or influence legal work product, the ethical and regulatory context is addressed briefly below.
A Note on Ethics and Professional Responsibility
Before exploring any of the tools in this directory, one point should be stated clearly. The use of generative artificial intelligence in legal practice is not ethically neutral. It engages the same professional duties that apply whenever a lawyer adopts a new technology.
The profession has confronted similar transitions before. Legal research databases, electronic discovery platforms, and document assembly systems all raised questions when first introduced. The regulatory framework adapted, and competent lawyers adapted with it. Generative AI presents the same issue, although the pace of change is faster.
Regardless of whether your law society has issued specific guidance on AI, existing professional obligations already apply:
- Competence. Lawyers must understand the tools they use on behalf of clients at a functional level. This does not require technical expertise. It does require understanding what a tool does, its limits, and the circumstances in which it is likely to fail.
- Confidentiality. Client information cannot be disclosed through the use of technology. Before entering client data into an AI system, a lawyer must understand where that information is processed, whether it is retained, and whether it may be used for model training. Many consumer tools do not provide terms suitable for legal practice.
- Supervision and responsibility for work product. If AI is used for drafting, research, or summarization, the lawyer remains responsible for the final work product. The technology carries no professional liability. The lawyer does.
- Billing and candour. Where the use of AI materially reduces the time required for a task, that may affect how the work should be billed. Submitting AI assisted content to a court or opposing counsel also carries the usual duty to ensure accuracy.
These obligations arise from existing professional rules. They are not specific to AI.
What is changing is the regulatory environment. Law societies across Canada and other common law jurisdictions are issuing guidance and, in some cases, proposing rule amendments.
For a consolidated reference to current regulatory guidance, see AI Guidance for Lawyers: A Comprehensive Resource List by Jurisdiction. That resource tracks law society notices, court policies, and professional conduct guidance across Canadian provinces and major common law jurisdictions.
Tool Categories
Legal AI Platforms
This directory lists artificial intelligence platforms designed specifically for legal work. The tools include research systems, drafting platforms, litigation analytics, document review technology, and practice management systems that incorporate AI functionality.
General AI Tools Used by Lawyers
Many lawyers rely on general purpose artificial intelligence systems for drafting assistance, summarization, research support, and data analysis. This section identifies widely used platforms that were not built specifically for legal practice but are frequently integrated into legal workflows.
AI Automation Tools for Law Firms
Automation platforms allow law firms to connect applications and automate routine administrative tasks. These tools often integrate with document systems, intake forms, billing platforms, and AI services to streamline workflows.
AI Tools for Building Legal Technology
This section identifies platforms used to build legal technology solutions. These include model hosting platforms, AI development tools, vector databases, and frameworks used to create custom legal applications.






