EvenUp on May 13, 2026, unveiled a new package of AI products aimed at personal injury attorney firms, including Pre-Litigation as a Service, the next evolution of its legal AI assistant Companion, and expanded drafting tools through its Firmwide Knowledge Base.
The company said the launches amount to a new operating model for personal injury law, one built around proactive AI rather than the slower, manual workflows many firms still use. EvenUp said its system is already used by 30% of the top 100 PI firms and applies across more than 10,000 cases a week, covering over $14 billion in damages.
At the center of the announcement is PLAAS, which EvenUp said combines purpose-built AI for personal injury law with its US-based case management team to handle the full lifecycle of a case. The company said the service is already helping firms recover 95% of available third-party policy limits, request medical records 66 days faster, deliver demands 47 days faster, cut time on desk by up to three months and save about $1,000 per case in carrying costs.
Rami Karabibar, a company executive, said the launch is more than a product release. He said personal injury law is entering a new era, one in which AI will play a much more central role in how firms operate, how decisions are made and how cases move forward. He also said the industry has long leaned on adding more people and more manual work to keep pace, and argued that technology can give firms more consistency, visibility and confidence across each case.
EvenUp’s pitch comes as private equity investment, consolidation and national expansion reshape the personal injury industry, while staffing shortages, rising attrition and more complex caseloads make the work harder to scale. The company said case managers are often juggling hundreds of files that require coordination across treatment, medical records and drafting, a pressure point PLAAS is designed to absorb.
Glen Lerner, another company figure, said the system is already winning over the people who matter most inside firms. He said EvenUp delivers better case development and moves his team off the desk sooner, freeing top staff to spend more time on the biggest cases. He added that he is getting a better product, making more money and providing a better service to clients.
The question now is whether EvenUp’s promise of measurable gains becomes the new baseline for firms that want to compete on speed, output and recoveries. For a sector built on high-volume files and tight margins, the company is betting that AI will no longer sit on the edge of the process. It will sit in the middle of it.
