The round brings the total funding raised by Harvey to more than $1 billion and values the company at $11 billion, it said in a Wednesday (March 25) press release.
Harvey’s artificial intelligence (AI)-powered products streamline workflows in contract analysis, due diligence, compliance and litigation, according to the release.
More than 25,000 custom agents operate on the platform, and Harvey’s legal engineers work with customers to build and improve the agents, the release said.
Harvey’s products are used by more than 1,300 customers in 60 countries, including most of the Am Law 100, the release said.
With the new funding, Harvey will expand the AI agents customers run on its platform and grow the embedded legal engineering teams supporting them globally, per the release.
“AI isn’t just assisting lawyers. It’s becoming the system through which legal work gets done,” Harvey CEO and Co-founder Winston Weinberg said in the release. “The law firms and in-house teams leading the way are building agents that execute complex workflows so lawyers can focus on judgment, strategy and outcomes.”
Pat Grady, partner at Sequoia, which co-led the funding round with GIC, said in the release: “More than 100,000 lawyers around the world run their most critical work on Harvey, and we believe it’s positioned to become one of the most important companies of the next decade.”
GIC said in a Wednesday post on LinkedIn: “Harvey’s rapid adoption across leading law firms and Fortune 500 legal departments underscores this shift [to automating rote legal work]. We are excited to support the company’s continued expansion as they scale their global operations.”
Harvey’s latest funding round follows a December Series F in which the company raised $160 million and was valued at $8 billion. Before that, the company closed a June Series E in which it raised $300 million at a $5 billion valuation.
PYMNTS reported in October that AI systems are becoming embedded infrastructure in law firms and in-house operations, and that investors are taking notice. At that point, funding to legal technology startups had surpassed $2.4 billion in 2025.