Harvey AI Upgrades Review Tables as Platform Hits 700K Daily Legal Tasks
Lawrence Jengar Apr 15, 2026 15:31
Harvey AI launches collaborative review tables with real-time features as the $11B legal AI platform processes over 700,000 daily tasks and 50M weekly contract extractions.
Harvey AI rolled out significant upgrades to its document review tables on April 15, adding real-time collaboration features and smarter extraction logic as the legal AI platform continues its rapid expansion across major law firms.
The updates come as Harvey processes more than 700,000 legal tasks daily and extracts 50 million contract terms weekly—numbers that underscore why Sequoia, Kleiner Perkins, and Andreessen Horowitz valued the company at $11 billion following a $200 million funding round last month.
What's New in the Review Tables
The upgraded tables target a persistent pain point in legal work: keeping large teams aligned during document-heavy projects like M&A due diligence or litigation discovery.
Three core improvements stand out. First, an "Improve Prompt" feature that rewrites vague queries into precise extraction commands. Type "change-of-control provisions" and the system reformulates it to pull exactly what you need. Second, lawyers can now upload existing diligence request templates and have Harvey auto-generate corresponding table columns—eliminating the manual rebuild for every new deal.
The third change addresses how legal analysis actually works. Conditional columns let users chain logic: extract governing law in column A, then trigger jurisdiction-specific checks in column B based on that result. It mimics how associates think through contracts rather than treating each data point as isolated.
Collaboration Gets a Visual Overhaul
Harvey added a flagging system with multi-colored tags—red for deal-breakers, orange for negotiation items, yellow for standard terms. Teams can comment directly on cells, explaining why something got flagged or resolving questions without jumping to email threads.
The AI can then query this human-added context. Ask "summarize all red-flagged tenant obligations" and responses incorporate not just extracted text but the flags and comments your team added. It's attempting to capture institutional knowledge that typically lives in associates' heads or scattered Slack messages.
Market Position Strengthening
Harvey, founded in 2022 by Winston Weinberg and Gabriel Pereyra, has moved aggressively beyond its initial law firm focus. The company counts a significant portion of AmLaw 100 firms as customers and recently signed Paris Saint-Germain as a client for its in-house legal operations.
Strategic acquisitions of Lume AI, Hexus, and Mirage ML have expanded Harvey's technical capabilities, while the OpenAI Startup Fund's backing provides access to cutting-edge model development.
For legal departments weighing AI adoption, the review table upgrades address a real gap: most AI tools excel at extraction but fumble collaboration. Whether Harvey's approach can handle the messiness of actual deal teams—conflicting opinions, evolving priorities, last-minute scope changes—remains the test that matters.
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