Frequently Asked Questions
Inhouse leverages the latest versions of major LLMs (OpenAI and Anthropic) and refines results using a custom Knowledge Base, constantly updated from lawyer feedback data—a critical resource other AI platforms lack.
Inhouse’s AI is tailored to support the daily operations of small to midsize businesses. It excels at drafting and reviewing employment and commercial contracts and advising on HR, tax, compliance, IP, and more. It’s not built for litigation, complex transactions like M&A, or highly technical areas like patents.
Inhouse AI is the world’s most accurate AI for legal work, but we still recommend that users get all work-product checked by their Inhouse lawyer. AIl AI can hallucinate or fail to take nuances into consideration. Fortunately, getting a legal verification is fast and highly affordable.
Our training data is regularly updated to reflect new laws, regulations, and case decisions. However, changes made within the past six months may not yet be reflected.
Third parties cannot train their models on our data, and any training of our models uses anonymized data only. We adhere to industry-standard privacy protocols and host all data in the United States. Note that only communications with your attorney are privileged.
Inhouse is not a law firm. Lawyers on our platform work independently and use our AI to reduce costs. You don’t have an attorney-client relationship with them until you sign their retainer agreement. Though we vet our attorneys, we aren’t responsible for their advice quality; however, we’ll refund any of our fees if you’re unsatisfied.
Any document or advice from Inhouse can be submitted for a lawyer verification. They’ll spend up to 30 minutes assessing its accuracy. If the draft is lengthy, incomplete, or needs work, the lawyer will explain why additional time is required. This service provides general information rather than tailored legal work.
If an attorney rates any legal task as Accurate, we back it with our Reliability Guarantee. If it’s not ultimately 100% accurate, you’ll receive a full refund.
Customer experience is our priority. If any legal task is inaccurate or if you’re dissatisfied with the advice, we’ll refund all payments made to us.
AI can not be a lawyer. Unauthorized Practice of Law (UPL) regulations, commonly adopted in the United States and many other jurisdictions prevent AI from serving in the role of an attorney. Model Rule 5.5 of the American Bar Association (ABA) states that only a licensed and trained attorney may practice law, including providing legal advice, representing clients in court, and preparing legal documents. AI, being neither licensed nor a human, cannot fulfill these requirements. UPL laws make it illegal for anyone, or anything, including AI software, to hold itself out as authorized to practice law or provide legal representation without appropriate credentials. These laws are designed to protect the public from unqualified legal advice, errors, and ethical breaches. For all these reasons, Inhouse makes it fast and easy to submit the documents you draft with AI to a licnensed human attorney for review and finalization.
While large language models can generate documents that look like legal documents, AI can not be a lawyer. Unauthorized Practice of Law (UPL) regulations prevent AI from serving in the role of an attorney. When you draft or review a legal matter with Inhouse, we make it fast and easy to submit your work to a licnensed human attorney for review and finalization.
A legal AI like Inhouse can draft and review a variety of legal documents. We trained and tuned the custom AI orchestration at Inhouse to handle a variety of document types including: Contracts & Agreements (service agreements, NDAs, consulting contracts, vendor agreements, and general contract drafting), Corporate & Business Formation (LLC formations, corporate structures, shareholder agreements, equity arrangements, and business entity creation), Employment & Labor (employment contracts, offer letters, workplace disputes, termination issues, and HR-related matters), Real Estate & Property (lease agreements, property sales, landlord-tenant disputes, and real estate transactions), Intellectual Property & Technology (patents, trademarks, privacy policies, terms of service, and technology-related legal documents), Finance & Securities (loans, promissory notes, investment agreements, and financial instruments).
Due to the fact an AI can not legally serve as a lawyer, Inhouse makes it easy and affordable to submit the AI output to a licensed, human attorney who is an expert in the area of the law you require for review and finalization.
Unlike chatGPT, Inhouse follows a playbook to produce better first drafts of a variety of legal documents. Inhouse makes it easy and fast to submit the AI output to a human attorney for review and finalization.