Alice secures €1M to make AI legally verifiable
Ghent-based legaltech startup Alice has raised €1 million to develop verifiable AI workflows for European lawyers, aiming to bridge the gap between powerful AI models and the strict compliance, audit and accountability requirements of the legal profession.
The funding round, reported on 8 January 2026, positions Alice among a new wave of European startups trying to turn the recent surge in generative AI into robust, regulated tools that can be trusted in courtrooms, deal rooms and regulatory filings.
Targeting AI that lawyers can actually use
While many law firms have experimented with AI assistants and document automation tools, adoption remains cautious. Lawyers operate under tight professional rules, must protect client confidentiality and are ultimately accountable for every piece of advice they sign off on.
Alice is building workflows that are not only powered by large language models but are also designed to be traceable, auditable and compatible with European regulatory demands. That means every AI-assisted step in a legal process—whether drafting, reviewing or summarising—must leave a clear trail explaining how an answer was generated and on which sources it relied.
This focus on verifiability is especially relevant as the EU AI Act and existing frameworks such as GDPR push organisations to prove that their use of AI systems is transparent, fair and controllable.
Why verifiable AI matters in law
From black box to evidence-ready
Traditional AI models often operate as black boxes: they generate outputs, but cannot easily show how they arrived at them. For a consumer app, that may be acceptable. For a legal opinion that could be challenged in court, it is not.
By focusing on verifiable AI workflows, Alice is addressing three core pain points for European law firms:
- Accountability: Lawyers must be able to demonstrate that key decisions were made by qualified professionals, not blindly delegated to an algorithm.
- Explainability: Courts, regulators and clients increasingly expect a clear explanation of how technology was used in preparing documents, evidence bundles or compliance reports.
- Risk management: Firms need structured AI governance—including logs, version control and access rights—to reduce malpractice and reputational risk.
In practice, that means Alice is likely to emphasise features such as source citation, change tracking, human-in-the-loop approvals and configurable compliance workflows tailored to different jurisdictions.
Designed for the European regulatory landscape
Unlike many US-focused legaltech products, Alice is being built from the ground up for Europe’s fragmented but highly regulated market. Law firms must navigate national bar rules, sectoral regulations and cross-border data transfer restrictions.
By embedding data protection, model governance and jurisdiction-specific controls into its platform, Alice aims to offer a safer path for European firms that want to benefit from AI automation without breaching ethical or regulatory boundaries.
How Alice fits into the legaltech and AI ecosystem
From experimentation to production workflows
Over the past two years, many European firms have run pilots with generic AI chatbots and off-the-shelf tools. The next phase is moving from experiments to production-grade systems embedded in day-to-day work.
Alice appears to be positioning itself as that production layer: a platform where firms can define standardised, repeatable AI workflows—for example, for contract review, due diligence, e-discovery or regulatory monitoring—while maintaining granular control over who can do what, and how results are checked.
By providing structured templates, guardrails and logging, the startup aims to reduce the ad-hoc, ungoverned use of AI tools by individual lawyers, which can expose firms to security and compliance risks.
Competing on trust, not just features
The legaltech market is increasingly crowded, with global players and niche startups all promising faster drafting and smarter search. For European buyers, however, the differentiator is shifting from raw capability to trust.
That trust has several dimensions:
- Data residency and privacy: Ensuring sensitive case material and client data remain within compliant European infrastructure.
- Model transparency: Clarifying whether tools rely on proprietary or open AI models, and how they are trained and updated.
- Operational resilience: Demonstrating that AI-powered workflows continue to function reliably at scale, with clear fallback options if a model fails or behaves unexpectedly.
By highlighting verifiability and alignment with European norms, Alice is betting that law firms will favour solutions that can withstand regulator and client scrutiny over those that simply promise faster drafting.
Implications for European law firms
From manual processes to structured automation
If Alice delivers on its vision, European firms could gradually shift from heavily manual, email- and document-driven processes to structured, AI-enhanced workflows that still keep lawyers firmly in control.
Potential benefits include:
- Higher productivity: Routine tasks such as first-draft generation, clause comparison and document classification can be partially automated.
- More consistent quality: Standardised workflows reduce the variability between teams and offices, particularly in cross-border matters.
- Improved knowledge reuse: AI workflows can be linked to internal knowledge bases, turning past work into a living resource rather than static archives.
For clients, this could translate into faster turnaround times, more predictable pricing and clearer transparency about how AI technology is used in their matters.
Preparing for an AI-regulated future
The timing of Alice‘s funding is significant. As the EU AI Act moves towards implementation, professional services firms are under pressure to document and control their use of AI systems. Tools that natively support logging, risk assessment and documentation of AI-assisted steps could become essential, not optional.
By focusing specifically on verifiable AI workflows for lawyers, the Ghent startup is positioning itself at the intersection of legaltech, regtech and enterprise AI governance—a space where demand is expected to grow rapidly as regulation catches up with technology.
The €1 million raise gives Alice fresh capital to refine its product, deepen integrations with existing law firm systems and expand across key European markets. For a profession that has historically moved cautiously with new technology, the promise of AI that is not only powerful but provably compliant may prove compelling.

