What Eudia does

Eudia is an AI-augmented intelligence platform designed to manage the risk, knowledge, and operations of in-house legal teams. Rather than building yet another contract-review tool, Eudia targets the broader mandate of corporate legal departments — contracts, M&A diligence, litigation, IP, regulatory, vendor management, and outside-counsel orchestration — with AI agents that work alongside lawyers to handle the routine and amplify the strategic.

The company has been explicit about its mission to "kill the billable hour" and shift in-house legal departments from spending-driven to outcome-driven operations. In September 2025, Eudia launched the first AI-Augmented Law Firm in Arizona, taking advantage of Arizona's regulatory sandbox that permits non-lawyer ownership of law firms; the firm is initially focused on M&A. Customers include Intuit, Airbnb, Duracell, Dropbox, Citi, and the U.S. Air Force.

Who it's for

Eudia is built for General Counsel, Chief Legal Officers, and legal operations leaders at large enterprises. The platform is positioned for legal departments running multi-million-dollar outside-counsel budgets that want to bring more work in-house, reduce hourly spend, and capture institutional knowledge.

Pricing

Eudia sells enterprise contracts to Fortune 500-class legal departments. Pricing is bespoke and quoted by sales.

Team & funding

Eudia was founded in 2023 by Omar Haroun (CEO), David Van Reyk, and Ashish Agrawal. The company is headquartered in Palo Alto, California with roughly 200+ employees as of 2026. Eudia launched publicly in February 2025 with a $105M Series A led by General Catalyst, with participation from Sierra Ventures, Floodgate, Defy, B3 Capital, and angels including Gokul Rajaram, Chris Re, Andrew Sieja, Mike Gamson, and Scott Belsky. The structure: $30M upfront with $75M conditional on M&A. In July 2025, Eudia acquired the Irish legal-services firm Johnson Hana, adding 300+ lawyers.

Position vs competitors

Eudia competes with Harvey, Spellbook, Eve, Robin AI, and traditional legal-tech vendors like Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis. Its differentiator is targeting the in-house corporate legal team rather than law firms, plus the rollup strategy combining software with an AI-augmented law firm in Arizona.