Lawgic LLC has roots dating to the early 1990s and has evolved into a specialized document automation platform for trusts and estates attorneys and family law practitioners. The software is built around a patented Intelligent Legal Technology system that uses a question-and-answer interview to drive document assembly, automatically resolving legal issues based on attorney input and generating fully formatted output documents. Lawgic focuses on supporting solo practitioners and small firm attorneys who handle estate planning and business entity matters.
The platform's core function is guiding the attorney through a structured interview, during which the software's logic engine selects the correct provisions, resolves internal conflicts, and assembles a complete, numbered document with table of contents in Microsoft Word or WordPerfect format. For estate plans involving married couples, Lawgic allows shared information to be entered once and automatically generates mirror documents for the spouse. A client synopsis is produced alongside the final documents. Subscribers report the platform typically saves five to ten hours per estate plan compared to manual drafting.
Lawgic is used by solo practitioners and small estate planning firms in the jurisdictions it supports. The platform is particularly valued by attorneys who handle a significant volume of estate plans and need to produce consistent, complete documents efficiently. The company's EstateWorks partnership extends the platform's reach into probate administration through an integrated ProbatePlus module for applicable states.
Lawgic's competitive position rests on its narrow specialization and its patented logic engine, which produces internally consistent documents without requiring the attorney to manually verify clause compatibility. Its limitation — coverage of a limited number of U.S. states — makes it suitable primarily for practices concentrated in supported jurisdictions rather than attorneys serving clients across many states.
Hands-on review pending. Scores reflect industry consensus.