Editorial take
Why it stands out
Harvey should be treated as a vertical enterprise AI platform for legal and professional services, not a generic workspace assistant.
Tool profile
Professional-class legal and professional-services AI platform focused on contract analysis, due diligence, compliance, research, and secure enterprise deployment.
Legal research and drafting support
Harvey belongs in the database because it represents one of the clearest examples of vertical AI becoming real software infrastructure for professional work. The official site positions Harvey as an AI platform for legal and professional services, with messaging centered on contract analysis, diligence, litigation, compliance, and enterprise deployment. That focus makes it materially different from general-purpose AI workspaces trying to stretch into legal use cases after the fact.
It also deserves inclusion because the commercial posture is clear even though pricing is not self-serve. Harvey is obviously sold as an enterprise product, and the official site emphasizes security controls, compliance posture, and large-firm adoption rather than trying to force the product into a low-friction seat-based checkout flow. For a premium database, the honest thing is to say that Harvey is custom-priced and evaluate it on fit, scope, and deployment posture instead of inventing a public price ladder that does not exist.
Quick fit
Editorial take
Harvey should be treated as a vertical enterprise AI platform for legal and professional services, not a generic workspace assistant.
What it does well
Primary use cases
Fit notes
Pricing snapshot
Harvey does not currently publish public dollar pricing on the checked official site. The product is sold through enterprise contact and demo flows.