Eudia, a Palo Alto-based AI startup, is offering something entirely new: the world’s first AI-augmented law firm.
Its end goal is
nothing less than the death of the billable hour that, according to CEO Omar Haroun, has run entirely out of control.
“Most legal departments have lost control of their budgets and their knowledge,” Haroun said in a press release announcing the launch of Eudia Counsel, which he called “the first AI-native law firm.”
The company has fought hard to bring its novel approach to light, Haroun told
Fortune at the company’s 2025 Augmented Intelligence Summit in New York.
Arizona is the only state in the country where a law firm is not required to be owned by lawyers, he said. Even still, there are technicalities. Eudia is not technically set up as a law firm, but a company that is a “provider of a law firm.”
Haroun told
Fortune that the economics of AI can, for example, transform pro bono work, which he sees as “the reason people like me went to law school” in the first place.
Gary Hood, general counsel for Berkshire Hathaway-owned Duracell, said using Eudia has been a “no-brainer” for contracts and due diligence during M&A.
Haroun said some clients were spending hundreds of millions of dollars on outside counsel, and that’s where Eudia steps in.
And what about people? Eudia co-founder Ashish Agrawal likened the tools to a brand new employee that every company has to be patient with and incorporate “organically.” Human inputs, he told
Fortune, are essential to AI working properly.
—Nick Lichtenberg