RelativityOne is not merely a cloud wrapper around legacy Relativity; it is clearly the flagship platform that Relativity wants the market to standardize on for large-scale litigation, investigations, compliance, and government review work. The old draft had the broad category right, but it blended parent-brand facts, used the wrong website, and missed several important buying signals. The live product page frames RelativityOne as an all-in-one secure platform spanning investigations, compliance, and litigation, with core workflows across legal hold, collection, processing, review, production, and newer generative-AI workflows such as aiR for Review and aiR for Privilege. Public messaging around migration also matters: Relativity now states that by 2028 all new matters and workspaces will be hosted in RelativityOne, which reinforces that this is the strategic future-state product rather than an optional SaaS variant. Security and compliance posture are category-leading in public materials. Relativity’s own security white paper and compliance pages point to Microsoft Azure infrastructure and certifications / attestations including ISO 27001, SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA, and FedRAMP, with FedRAMP authorization specifically highlighted for RelativityOne Government. Commercially, pricing is still sales-led rather than transparent, but the signals are stronger than the stub suggested: the product page markets flexible pricing tailored to customer needs, while Relativity’s pricing announcement history emphasizes pay-as-you-go and reduced user-fee friction. Independent validation is also far stronger than the old file showed. Serper surfaced substantial G2 and Capterra footprint, and Reddit discussion adds practical nuance: RelativityOne is widely treated as the enterprise default when scale and cloud security matter, but buyers and operators still talk about certification, learning curve, admin depth, and cost as real tradeoffs.
Capabilities
Spans 8 product areas: Electronic Discovery, Legal Holds, Document , Review and , Analysis, Document Management, Data , Visualization.
Workflow Coverage
Based on published feature listings, this tool maps to 4 workflow areas:
- Document Review & Management — Document Database Management (Repository for Archiving and Retention), Document Disposition Based on User Defined Rules, Version Control, Search Metadata, Classifications and Indexing (+6 more)
- Filing & Compliance — Access Controls, Encryption capabilities, Data Loss and Malware Prevention, Data Recovery (+3 more)
- Research & Analysis — Early Case Assessment
- Communication & Collaboration — Integration with Microsoft Teams
Workflow mappings derived from published feature lists. Not independently verified.
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, Relativityone is used in these workflows:
What practitioners struggle with
Real frustrations from legal professionals — the problems Relativityone addresses (or should address). Sourced from practitioner reviews, Reddit threads, and case studies.
500K documents to review, contract attorneys burning out after 4 hours of screen-staring, nobody knows if the review is consistent across 20 reviewers — and the partner watching the budget bleed
Government legal team processes hundreds of FOIA requests and internal investigations per year — each one requires collecting, reviewing, and producing thousands of documents with mandatory redaction of PII, deliberative process privilege, and law enforcement exemptions. No affordable eDiscovery infrastructure designed for recurring government-scale review, just enterprise tools priced for litigation
Company gets hit with a litigation hold and half the relevant data is in Slack threads, Zoom recordings, and Google Drive comments — the IT team exports Slack's native JSON dump and hands 4 million messages to legal, who can't search it, can't filter it, and has no way to identify which channels are relevant without reading every single thread
Where it fits in your workflow
Before Relativityone
An enterprise legal team, service provider, or government review group needs one cloud platform that can preserve, collect, process, review, and produce massive datasets across litigation, investigations, and compliance matters.
After Relativityone
RelativityOne carries matters from legal hold and collection through analytics, privilege review, production, and longer-tail compliance or surveillance workflows.
Integrations & hand-offs
Legal hold / preservation -> collection from enterprise and collaboration sources -> processing and analytics -> ai-assisted review and privilege workflows -> production, investigations, or regulatory follow-up.
Community Data
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