EvenUp on Wednesday launched a new service for personal injury lawyers that it says can take over much of the pre-litigation grind, pairing artificial intelligence with U.S.-based case managers to handle the work from intake through demand. The company is calling the offering Pre-Litigation as a Service, or PLAAS, and says early use has already delivered sharper results for firms.
EvenUp said firms using the service recovered 95% of available third-party policy limits, requested medical records 66 days faster and delivered demands 47 days faster. It said cases spent up to three months less time sitting on a desk and generated about $1,000 in savings per case in carrying costs. The company said early testing of PLAAS led to more than $10 million in subscriptions.
Rami Karabibar, EvenUp’s chief executive, said the launch is bigger than a product release and marks a shift in how personal injury firms may work. He said personal injury law is entering a new era in which AI will play a much more central role in operations, decisions and case movement. Glen Lerner, who uses the service, said the biggest benefit is that it frees senior staff to focus on higher-value work, adding that the system gets cases developed better and off the desk sooner.
The launch lands as EvenUp, a personal injury AI company, continues to scale quickly. The company said it is used by 30% of the top 100 PI firms and processes more than 10,000 cases per week, representing over $14 billion in damages. It also raised a $150 million Series E in October 2025 and said it reached a $2 billion valuation last fall, bringing total capital raised to $385 million.
PLAAS sits in a familiar but still sensitive corner of the legal business: a blend of software and human case handling that tries to automate the routine without losing judgment. EvenUp said its updated Companion AI assistant is designed to act as a firmwide operating center, surfacing high-value cases, flagging risks such as missing MRIs or undiagnosed traumatic brain injuries, and prioritizing attention across a docket. Its new Firmwide Knowledge Base is meant to apply a firm’s own standards and drafting preferences automatically across AI-generated documents.
The pitch is clear. EvenUp is not just selling software to personal injury lawyers; it is trying to move deeper into the work itself. With pre-litigation under one roof, the company is betting firms will trade more of their manual workflow for a service that promises speed, consistency and lower carrying costs. The open question is how far the market will let that model spread, and whether the human oversight built into PLAAS becomes the standard or remains the exception.

