
Legal AI startup Eve has joined the unicorn club after securing $103 million in a Series B funding round, reaching a $1 billion valuation. For the San Francisco-based company, it is a big upgrade as the company is contributing to the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) into plaintiff litigation management.
Founded in 2020, Eve’s AI-powered plaintiff management platform leverages advanced large language models (LLMs) to automate complex legal workflows that are traditionally burdensome for plaintiff law firms.
This funding round was led by Spark Capital, with participation from Andreessen Horowitz (a16z), Lightspeed Venture Partners, and Menlo Ventures.
From intake assessment to drafting demand letters, complaints, and discovery documents, Eve’s AI-powered platform dramatically helps plaintiffs’ lawyers with case preparation while enabling law firms to take on more clients and handle more volume.
CEO Jayanth Madheswaran says Eve’s mission is “arming plaintiff law firms – the ones fighting for individuals against corporate giants – with AI to deliver justice at a scale never seen before.”
Over 450 U.S. law firms are currently in use of Eve’s services, including Mike Morse Law Firm, The Law Offices of James Scott Farrin, Barrett & Farahany, Disparti Law Group, Frontier Law Center, Laurel Employment Law, and Hershey Law.
The $103 million Series B round also builds on Eve’s $47 million Series A earlier this year and $14 million seed round in late 2023. As Madheswaran noted, this funding will help accelerate product development focused on transparency, reliability, and compliance, alongside scaling partnership and onboarding programs.
Madheswaran, who has experience in venture capital and tech engineering, emphasizes that AI integration into plaintiff workflows requires deep domain understanding to ensure results are accurate and actionable.
“Plaintiff attorneys’ resources are limited and they have to serve hundreds of clients a year – they don’t have repeat clients. That’s a pretty complex business: no recurring revenue and churning customers, so labour and efficiency are directly what they’re looking for,” Madheswaran told Legal IT Insider in an interview. “This is one reason why some of our customers are doubling or tripling client numbers, which creates better outcomes for neighbourhoods.”
“This is the fun part now. We have strong product-market fit and firms are using us every day. People had a lot of scepticism at first, including investors and everyone else in the AI world, but it’s not hype – we’re affecting lives for the better,” Madheswaran continued.
Madheswaran announces in a blog post where the recent funding will be going to – “An end-to-end AI platform, trustworthy, industry-leading AI, and deep partnerships to help every firm go AI-Native.”
Additionally, this new funding round for Eve occurs amid a broader surge of AI startups that are transforming the traditional legal industry. For instance, firms like Harvey and Legora have similarly secured multibillion-dollar investments, which also signals an increasing interest from investors in the integration of AI into legal services.
However, for Eve, its exclusive focus on the plaintiff law market and the business models associated with it, sets it apart from other AI-Legal startups, as the company is specifically targeting the $300 billion litigation market in the U.S.
Yet challenges lie ahead. Although Eve’s rise to a unicorn status reflects increasing investors’ interest, it also highlights concerns about AI reshaping and restructuring legal services. The legal industry still remains cautious about AI verifying accuracy and further protecting client confidentiality.
As such, the question remains how the integration of AI in legal services will redefine access in plaintiff litigation and advocate for plaintiffs in cases that are complex and hard to navigate as the entire process continues to be more automated.