
Exclusive-Legal startup Harvey AI in talks to raise funding at $5 billion valuation
AI (Artificial Intelligence) letters are placed on computer motherboard in this illustration taken, June 23, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
-Harvey AI, a fast-growing legal startup, is in advanced talks to raise over $250 million in a new round of funding at a valuation of $5 billion, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
The funding round, led by venture capital firms Kleiner Perkins and Coatue, would mark a significant leap in Harvey's valuation from $3 billion in just a few months. Sequoia Capital, an existing backer, is also expected to increase its investment in this round.
Investor interest in Harvey is driven by the company's revenue growth, according to people with knowledge of thecompany's numbers. Its annualized run rate reached $75 million in April, up from $50 million earlier this year.
This 50% increase in a matter of months has been fueled by strategic partnerships with major consulting firms like PwC as well as direct sales to large corporations for in-house general counsel use, said the sources, who requested anonymity to discuss private information.
Harvey, Coatue and Sequoia did not respond to requests for comment. Kleiner Perkins declined to comment.
Harvey, founded in 2022, has become one of the most high-profile legal startups in the age of generative AI.
The company uses AI models and machine-learning algorithms to assist lawyers and legal professionals in various tasks, including document review, contract drafting and legal research.
It has focused on selling to elite law firms and the biggest corporations, and building specific modules for tasks such as M&A compliance.
The startup, which began by partnering with OpenAI to build a custom-trained model for legal professionals, announced this week that it expanded its offerings by adding foundation models from Anthropic and Google to its platform.
The round, once finalized, would mark a doubling down in Harvey for Kleiner Perkins, which co-led Harvey's $80 million Series B in December 2023.
The adoption of AI technology has fueled surging interest from venture capital investors in the legal sector, which used to be overlooked by VCs for not having a growing addressable market and being dominated by a handful of big players.
In 2024,global investments in legal technology startups reached $2.1 billion, according to data from Crunchbase. The enthusiasm has grown, with February 2025 seeing one of the highest investment totals in U.S. legal tech history.
This surge in funding reflects the increasing adoption of AI and other advanced technologies in the legal industry, as firms seek to improve efficiency, reduce costs and enhance the quality of their services in an increasingly competitive market.
Goldman Sachs analysts estimated last year that about 44% of legal work could eventually be automated.
(Reporting by Krystal Hu in New York and Anna Tong in San Francisco; Editing by Mark Porter)

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
Exclusive-Anthropic hits $3 billion in annualized revenue on business demand for AI
FILE PHOTO: Anthropic logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -Artificial intelligence developer Anthropic is making about $3 billion in annualized revenue, according to two sources familiar with the matter, in an early validation of generative AI use in the business world. The milestone, which projects the company's current sales over the course of a year, is a significant jump from December 2024 when the metric was nearly $1 billion, the sources said. The figure crossed $2 billion around the end of March, and at May's end it hit $3 billion, one of the sources said. While consumers have embraced rival OpenAI's ChatGPT,a number of enterprises have limited their rollouts to experimentation, despite board-level interest in AI. Anthropic's revenue surge, largely from selling AI models as a service to other companies, is a data point showing how business demand is growing, one of the sources said. A key driver is code generation. The San Francisco-based startup, backed by Google parent Alphabet and is famous for AI that excels at computer programming. Products in the so-called codegenspace have experienced major growth and adoption in recent months, often drawing on Anthropic's models. This demand is setting Anthropic apart among software-as-a-service vendors. Its single-quarter revenue increases would count Anthropic as the fastest-growing SaaS company that at least one venture capitalist has ever seen. "We've looked at the IPOs of over 200 public software companies, and this growth rate has never happened," said Meritech General Partner Alex Clayton, who is not an Anthropic investor and has no inside knowledge of its sales. He cautioned that these comparisons are not fully precise, since Anthropic also has consumer revenue via subscriptions to its Claude chatbot. Still, by contrast, publicly traded SaaS company Snowflake took six quarters to go from $1 billion to $2 billion in such run-rate revenue, Clayton said. Anthropic competitor OpenAI has projected it will end 2025 with more than $12 billion in total revenue, up from $3.7 billion last year, three people familiar with the matter said. This total revenue is different from an estimated annualized figure like Anthropic's. Reuters could not determine this metric for OpenAI. The two rivals appear to be establishing their own swim lanes. While both offer enterprise and consumer products, OpenAI is shaping up to be a consumer-oriented company, and the majority of its revenue comes from subscriptions to its ChatGPT chatbot, OpenAI Chief Financial Officer Sarah Friar told Bloomberg late last year. OpenAI has not reported enterprise-specific revenue but said in May that paying seats for its ChatGPT enterprise product have grown to 3 million, from 2 million in February, and that T-Mobile and Morgan Stanley are among its enterprise customers. In the consumer race, Anthropic's Claude has seen less adoption than OpenAI. Claude's traffic, a proxy for consumer interest, was about 2% of ChatGPT's in April, according to Web analytics firm Similarweb. Anthropic, founded in 2021 by a team that departed OpenAI over differences in vision, closed a $3.5 billion fundraise earlier this year. That valued the company at $61.4 billion. OpenAI is currently valued at $300 billion. (Reporting by Anna Tong and Jeffrey Dastin in San Francisco; Additional reporting by Kenrick Cai in San Francisco and Krystal Hu in New York; Editing by Kenneth Li and Matthew Lewis)


The Star
3 days ago
- The Star
Brazil's Meliuz launches share offering for bitcoin purchase
FILE PHOTO: Representations of cryptocurrency Bitcoin are seen in this illustration taken November 25, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Brazilian fintech Meliuz said it has filed for a primary offering of shares with the aim of raising funds for the acquisition of bitcoin, with pricing scheduled for June 12. In a securities filing on Friday, Meliuz said the offering involves the primary distribution of, initially, 17,006,803 common shares to the amount of 150 million reais ($26.45 million). The operation may be expanded by up to 200% of the total shares initially offered, it added. ($1 = 5.6704 reais) (Reporting by Alberto Alerigi Jr; Writing by Isabel Teles)


The Star
3 days ago
- The Star
Google and DOJ to make final push in US search antitrust case
The new Google logo is seen in this illustration taken May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Alphabet's Google and U.S. antitrust enforcers will make their final arguments on whether the tech giant should be forced to sell its Chrome browser or adopt other measures to restore competition in online search, as the blockbuster antitrust trial concludes on Friday. The U.S. Department of Justice and a coalition of states are pressing to make Google not only sell Chrome, but also share search data and cease multibillion-dollar payments to Apple and other smartphone makers and wireless carriers that set Google as the default search engine on new devices. The proposals aim to restore competition after a judge found last year that Google illegally dominates the online search and related advertising markets. Artificial intelligence companies could get a boost after already rattling Google's status as the go-to tool to find information online. U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta is overseeing the trial, which began in April. He has said he aims to rule on the proposals by August. If the judge does require Google to sell off Chrome, OpenAI would be interested in buying it, Nick Turley, OpenAI's product head for ChatGPT, said at the trial. OpenAI would also benefit from access to Google's search data, which would help it make responses to user inquiries more accurate and up to date, Turley said. Google says the proposals go far beyond what is legally justified by the court's ruling, and would give away its technology to competitors. The company has already begun loosening agreements with smartphone makers including Samsung Electronics to allow them to load rival search and AI products. The DOJ wants the judge to go farther, banning Google from making lucrative payments in exchange for installation of its search app. (Reporting by Jody Godoy in Washington; Editing by Richard Chang)