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Law companies prepare for a deeper AI integration in '26 as it enters workflows
December 29, 2025
|Mint Bangalore
After a year of testing the waters, India's top law firms are heading into 2026 facing a decisive question: can artificial intelligence (AI) move from a promising pilot to everyday legal infrastructure?
As law firms deepen AI integration, the judiciary is also confronting the growing footprint of tech in legal practice.
(ISTOCKPHOTO)
What began as cautious experimentation in 2025 is now shifting toward deeper, workflow-level integration, even as firms remain measured about governance, client confidentiality and the impact on pricing. The transition is unfolding alongside growing judicial scrutiny, with a Supreme Court panel examining guardrails for AI use in legal processes.
Senior partners at the law firms say AI is increasingly being deployed across research, knowledge management, due diligence, drafting and dispute preparation, though adoption remains practice-specific, rather than uniform across firms.
The focus for 2026, the firms say, is not about adding more tools but redesigning legal workflows where tech can improve speed, accuracy and predictability.
Some firms are already scaling aggressively. Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas says it has moved decisively beyond pilots.
“In 2025, we moved from experimentation to full adoption, and today over 80% of our total headcount actively uses AI,” said Cyril Shroff, managing partner. “Our priority for 2026 is to take this to 90% plus, and shift the focus from adoption to intelligent automation.”
Shroff said the firm’s strategy is to deploy technology practice group by practice group, rather than rely on generic solutions. The firm is scaling tools such as Legora, Copilot, Litera and Casemine across research, drafting, diligence and knowledge retrieval. At Trilegal, technology is already embedded in day-to-day practice.
هذه القصة من طبعة December 29, 2025 من Mint Bangalore.
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