You're about to draft a contract with AI. Get a lawyer's blueprint before you start.
- What to prompt — and what to avoid
- Red flags specific to your deal
- Jurisdiction & enforceability gotchas
- Recording + notes you can keep
Our attorneys are licensed in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Texas. Three flat-fee tiers: a 20-minute AI prompting strategy session, a 48-hour document review, or done-for-you drafting. Starting at $200. No retainers. No "it depends" billing.
Pick the level of involvement you actually need. Most clients start with a review and move to drafting only when the stakes warrant it.
You're about to draft a contract with AI. Get a lawyer's blueprint before you start.
You drafted a contract or policy with AI. We tell you what's wrong, what's missing, and what to change.
Skip the AI draft entirely. Tell us what you need; we draft it, AI-accelerated, attorney-finished.
This is the flow for our Document Review tier. The AI Prompting Strategy session has its own pay-first flow — see the consultation page for that. Drafting matters are quoted per matter after intake.
Paste your contract or policy or upload the .docx. Tell us what it's for, what jurisdiction, and what you're worried about.
Your contract is read line by line by a licensed attorney. You get back a redlined Word doc, a risk-ranked summary, and a 15-minute follow-up session to walk through it.
You make the changes (or we make them for you). When you sign, you know exactly what you signed.
Each industry has its own AI-drafting traps. We've seen them.
NDAs, MSAs, DPAs, EULAs, terms of service. The ones AI gets dangerously wrong.
SOWs, retainer agreements, IP licenses and assignments. Where ownership clauses go to die.
Vendor agreements, returns policies, dropship contracts. State law landmines.
Lease assignments, independent contractor agreements, broker contracts. We know the category from the inside.
We don't tell clients to stop using AI. We help them use it without getting burned.
AIPromptLaw's attorneys are licensed in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Texas. Our team spent the last decade in-house at companies across real estate, SaaS, professional services, and regulated industries — drafting and negotiating the contracts small and medium-sized businesses sign every week.
We started AIPromptLaw because we kept watching clients, colleagues, and friends use AI to draft contracts — and then have no idea whether what they'd produced was safe to sign. We built this so they'd have an answer.
Yes — a contract is binding based on its content and proper execution, not who or what drafted it. The problem isn't that ChatGPT drafted it. The problem is that AI tools regularly produce contracts with missing indemnification clauses, ambiguous payment terms, unenforceable non-competes, and jurisdictional mistakes. That's why an attorney review matters.
LegalZoom sells you a template. AIPromptLaw reviews the specific document you generated with AI — for your business, your deal, your state — and tells you exactly what's wrong with it and how to fix it. You get a licensed attorney's eyes on your work, not a form.
NDAs, MSAs, independent contractor agreements, terms of service, privacy policies, SaaS subscription agreements, employment offer letters, vendor contracts, and most other commercial agreements and corporate policies common to small and medium-sized businesses.
Document review: 48 hours standard, 24-hour rush available for an additional fee. Consultations: typically available for scheduling within 3 business days. Drafting: 5–10 business days depending on complexity.
Yes, with a caveat. For state-specific issues (e.g., employment law, real estate, regulatory) we'll flag what needs a locally-admitted attorney. For commercial contracts and federal matters, we can work nationwide.
Pick a tier. Strategy session, document review, or custom drafting. Starting at $200.