james ding
April 27, 2026 13:42
Harvey AI’s new Dallas office highlights the rapid growth in legal AI with the goal of deepening relationships with Texas businesses and corporations.
Harvey AI, an $11 billion legal technology company, has officially opened a new office in Dallas, taking a significant step in its expansion into the Texas legal market. The move comes as the company continues to deepen its partnerships with the region’s leading law firms, corporations and even professional sports teams.
Texas has been the top destination for business expansion in the United States for 14 consecutive years, driven by economic growth and business-friendly policies. Dallas in particular has emerged as a hub for high-stakes legal work, making it a natural fit for Harvey’s generative AI platform. Based on large-scale language models fine-tuned for legal applications, the company’s tools are designed to automate tasks such as contract analysis, litigation support, and due diligence, allowing professionals to focus on strategic decision-making.
The new office in Dallas already has more than a dozen employees and plans to hire across customer success, legal engineering and sales roles. This local presence will support Harvey’s partnerships with Texas-based legal heavyweights including Vinson & Elkins, Haynes Boone, Jackson Walker and McKool Smith, as well as major corporations such as AT&T and KBR. The company also recently became the official legal AI partner of the Dallas Mavericks and Texas Rangers, highlighting its growing influence beyond the traditional legal world.
Harvey’s rapid growth reflects broader trends in legal technology. Founded in 2022, the company quickly scaled, including raising $200 million in March 2026 to expand its AI tools across law firms and enterprises. The funding round, co-led by GIC and Sequoia, brings Harvey’s valuation to $11 billion, solidifying its position as a market leader in legal AI. According to the company, its platform is already used by the majority of AmLaw 100 companies and several in-house legal departments at Fortune 500 companies.
As competition intensifies in the generative AI space, Harvey’s investment in Dallas signals his intention to dominate the high-growth Texas market. With a growing client list and a focus on enterprise-grade security and integration with tools like Microsoft 365, the company is well-positioned to capitalize on the growing demand for AI-driven efficiencies in the legal sector.
Looking ahead, Harvey’s hiring push and continued investment in Texas suggests the company is investing heavily in becoming the go-to AI platform for legal professionals in the region. For those observing the intersection of AI and professional services, Harvey’s next move could set the tone for how generative AI will reshape the legal industry.
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