
vLex
AI legal research platform with 150M+ global legal documents, Vincent AI assistant, and multi-jurisdiction search.
What it does
vLex is an AI-enhanced global legal research platform - providing access to over 150 million legal documents across case law, legislation, secondary sources, and regulatory content from 100+ countries, enhanced by Vincent, vLex's AI legal research assistant. AI capabilities include Vincent AI that answers legal research questions in natural language by searching and synthesizing vLex's content library, AI-powered case law search that finds semantically relevant precedents beyond keyword matching, intelligent citation mapping that surfaces all cases citing a specific decision, AI document analysis that extracts key legal principles and holdings from case law, multi-jurisdiction search that simultaneously researches across multiple legal systems, and AI-generated research summaries that condense complex legal questions into structured answers with citations.
Why AI-ENHANCED
vLex is an established global legal database that has integrated Vincent AI natural language research, intelligent citation mapping, and AI document synthesis into a mature legal research and intelligence product.
Best for
Solo attorneys and legal researchers use vLex for global legal research - Vincent AI enabling natural language research across 150M+ documents without advanced boolean query skills.
Small law firms and legal departments use vLex for comprehensive legal research - AI-powered multi-jurisdiction search providing global coverage at lower cost than maintaining multiple jurisdiction-specific databases.
Mid-market law firms and corporate legal teams use vLex for systematic legal research - AI summaries accelerating research workflows and citation mapping surfacing relevant precedents efficiently.
Large law firms and multinational corporate legal teams use vLex for enterprise global legal intelligence - AI research across multiple jurisdictions supporting international transactions and regulatory compliance.
Limitations
Westlaw and LexisNexis have broader and more deeply curated US case law and statutory research — US-focused legal practices often prefer these platforms for primary law research despite lower cost.
Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis have invested heavily in legal AI — their AI research assistants have more extensive development and reliability track records than Vincent.
vLex's strength is global coverage breadth — content quality and currency varies across jurisdictions, particularly in smaller markets with less-developed legal publishing ecosystems.
Alternatives by segment
vLex from $65/month for individuals. Professional from $195/month. Enterprise pricing negotiated. Annual billing discount.





