Legal Research

#173 rlegaltech500

Lawlaw

Est. 2024 United States Updated 2026-02-10
ai
Unverified by r/legaltech members — this page is based on publicly available information, not hands-on testing or practitioner feedback. Verify your experience with Lawlaw

Consumer debt collection defense platform that helps individuals respond to debt lawsuits, generate court-ready Answers, negotiate settlements, and file motions for arbitration. Core capabilities: automated Answer generation for debt lawsuits, collection letter response templates, arbitration motion filing, settlement negotiation guidance, and attorney-reviewed legal documents. Legal entity: Resolved Inc. — explicitly ‘not a law firm’ (document generation, mailing, and secretarial services). Techstars Economic Mobility Class of 2024 (Samvid Ventures). Founded 2024 in San Diego, relocating to Evansville, IN. $120K funding. 49 LinkedIn followers, ~2 employees. F6S listed. CBS12 YouTube feature: ‘Can’t afford an attorney? This tech startup offers services…’ Inside Indiana Business coverage. Competitors: SoloSuit/Solo (dominant player, 367+ ConsumerAffairs reviews, class action filed against it Jan 2024), Upsolve (nonprofit bankruptcy), HelloResolve, TurboDebt. Category corrected: legal-research → case-management (consumer case navigation tool). NARROW LEGAL RELEVANCE: consumer self-help tool that replaces need for debt defense attorneys. Not a tool for legal practitioners — tool for consumers navigating the legal system without lawyers. Access-to-justice play in a market where millions of default judgments occur annually because defendants can’t afford $2,000-5,000 in attorney fees.

Company Info

  • Founded: 2024
  • Team size: 1-10 employees
  • Funding: $120K
  • HQ: United States
  • Sector: Legal Services

What We Haven’t Verified

This page was assembled from publicly available information. Feature claims and workflow mappings are based on what the vendor and third-party listings publish — not hands-on testing or practitioner feedback.

Workflows

Based on practitioner evidence, Lawlaw is used in these workflows:

What practitioners struggle with

Real frustrations from legal professionals — the problems Lawlaw addresses (or should address). Sourced from practitioner reviews, Reddit threads, and case studies.

Couple going through a relatively straightforward uncontested divorce is quoted $10,000-15,000+ per person by traditional family law attorneys — for what amounts to filling out state-specific forms, negotiating a few asset splits, and filing paperwork. They don't need a full-service attorney for every step, but they also can't afford to mess up court filings that affect custody, property division, and their financial future. Need a middle ground between 'hire a $350/hr attorney for everything' and 'download blank forms from the court website and hope for the best'

Client & Matter Lifecycle 22 vendors affected Solo practitioner · Small firm (2–10) · In-house counsel

Non-lawyer business owner gets a 30-page SaaS vendor contract from their cloud provider — they know they should have a lawyer review it but it's a $500/month tool and the legal review would cost more than a year's subscription. They sign without reading and discover an auto-renewal clause with 90-day notice requirement buried in section 14.3

Document Review & Management 12 vendors affected Solo practitioner · Small firm (2–10) · inhouse-smb · startup-founder

Where it fits in your workflow

Community Data

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