법률시장 Insights — 2026-06-27
As top-tier law firms expand, solo practitioners face tough competition. To survive, they should leverage content marketing, SEO, and AI legal tech to build trust and efficiency.
Legal Market Briefing — 2026-06-27
📰 Top Legal Market News
Big Law firms exceed 600 lawyers… intensified competition for talent and LegalTech
As of June 2026, top-tier law firms like Lee & Ko, Bae, Kim & Lee (BKL), and Yulchon have each surpassed 600 lawyers. According to a report by the Law Times, the race to secure top talent and advanced LegalTech is making the market environment increasingly difficult for small-to-medium firms and solo practitioners. Major firms are clearly strengthening their market dominance through high-tech investments and aggressive recruitment.

LegalTech evolution… expansion into AI agent-based workflow automation
Legal services are digitizing rapidly. A wave of LegalTech services is emerging to automate repetitive tasks like contract review, draft creation, and summarizing consultations. Shin & Kim, for example, has adopted generative AI services from the global LegalTech firm Harvey to assist in legal advisory work. The rise of AI-based automation tools is both a threat and an opportunity for solo practitioners.

Ministry of Justice immigration department personnel changes… administrative restructuring
Four secretaries have been promoted at the Ministry of Justice’s Korea Immigration Service. This reflects government efforts to improve legal infrastructure and suggests potential growth in legal demand for new areas like immigration and international law.
📊 Market Trends & Data
Saturation of the legal profession: Over 32,000 solo practitioners
As of 2026, the number of practicing lawyers has reached 32,168. This is 13,000 more than accountants (19,059) and seven times the number of patent attorneys (4,861). The rapid increase in the number of lawyers makes direct competition in the private practice market inevitable.
LegalTech market projected to grow to the 200 trillion won range
The domestic LegalTech market is expected to evolve into a massive 200 trillion won industry, driven by the automation of repetitive tasks and the expansion of AI-based legal consulting. Multilayered AI functions—including search, recommendation, summarization, and drafting—are fundamentally changing the lawyer's workflow.
💼 Marketing Strategy for Solo Practitioners
1. Secure search visibility through blogs and long-form content
The primary challenge for a solo practitioner is being discovered by potential clients. Regularly uploading informative content to a Naver blog (e.g., "5 Steps to Resolving Inheritance Tax Disputes," "3 Common Mistakes When Incorporating a Business") 2-3 times per week can significantly boost organic search traffic. Search engine optimization (SEO), such as targeting keywords like "Seoul Gangnam Divorce Lawyer," is essential.
2. Follow advertising regulations and conduct factual marketing
The most critical points to watch in online marketing are exaggeration/misleading claims (Article 3) and creating unfair expectations (Article 4). Phrases like "Guaranteed 99% win rate" or "How to win every case" are prohibited; you must honestly present your actual experience and results. Familiarizing yourself with the 2025 Lawyer Advertising Guidelines will help you build trust while avoiding legal risks.
3. Strengthen storytelling marketing via YouTube
While some practitioners obtain cases through platforms like Law & Company (LBox), high platform fees and intense competition are reducing their effectiveness. Instead, consistently uploading videos featuring case analyses, explanations of legal precedents, and client consultation scenarios on YouTube is highly effective for building a unique client base and establishing credibility.
🤖 LegalTech & AI Tools
1. Expanded use of AI for contract review and drafting
AI LegalTech is expanding across corporate legal affairs, including contract management, regulatory response, and tax/financial compliance. Small offices can use contract review automation tools like Harvey, LBox, or Lawform to reduce manual work time by 30-50%. However, final review and judgment remain the lawyer's responsibility, so AI should be treated as a "supporting tool."

2. Rise of security-focused solutions like closed-type AI 'Ai-Yul'
'Ai-Yul,' a closed-type legal AI developed by BHSN and Yulchon, solves concerns regarding the leakage of corporate confidential information. Solo practitioners can also combine simple AI search tools with cloud-based office management systems (e.g., Kakao Work, Slack) to increase efficiency while protecting client data. Moving beyond basic Google-based case searches to adopting tailored AI tools will be the key to competitiveness.
🎯 This Week's Action Checklist
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Write 1 Naver Blog post: Publish an informative article of over 2,000 characters including key keywords for your field (e.g., "sexual assault settlement consultation").
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YouTube channel planning: Establish a schedule and confirm filming dates for at least two video pieces (10-15 minutes) per month.
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Re-study lawyer advertising regulations: Review the 2025 Advertising Guidelines from the Korean Bar Association or LawyerAd and audit your current marketing materials.
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Trial AI tools: Test the free versions of contract review AI tools like LBox or Lawform to evaluate their practical application.
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SNS content calendar: Set a schedule to post legal trivia card news on Instagram/TikTok 1-2 times per week.
This briefing is based on information from legal and technology media outlets including Law Times, Legal Times, and ZDNet Korea.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.