Law Market Trends & Lawyer Marketing Strategies 2026
The gap between large Seoul-based firms and regional practices is widening, causing major revenue challenges for solo practitioners. With the rise of AI-driven search and self-representation, lawyers must pivot their marketing and leverage legal tech to survive.
Legal Market Briefing — 2026-07-15
📰 Major Legal Market News

South Korean legal market surpasses 10 trillion won, regional disparity deepens
According to a report by the Busan Ilbo, the domestic legal services market has exceeded 10 trillion won for the first time. However, this growth is heavily concentrated in large law firms. As the gap in legal fees between Seoul and Busan widens, regional solo practitioners are facing accelerated financial difficulties. While large firms see revenue growth from corporate legal work, solo practitioners—who rely heavily on individuals—are experiencing a decline in cases due to the rise of AI-driven self-litigation.

Structural changes in the Korean legal market: AI and regional gaps
A report by the Korea Economic Daily indicates that the average annual revenue per solo practitioner remained stagnant at 325.5 million won, a level barely changed over the last 19 years. Despite the number of lawyers growing to 40,000, profitability for solo practitioners has not improved. The proliferation of AI-based legal search tools is increasing the rate of pro se litigation (self-representation) among consumers, thereby shrinking entry opportunities for solo lawyers.
📊 Market Trends & Data
Increasing number of lawyers vs. stagnant income
Data released by the Korean Bar Association on April 21, 2026, shows that the number of registered practicing lawyers is 32,168. This is 13,000 more (1.7 times) than certified public accountants (19,059) and seven times the number of patent attorneys (4,861). Yet, despite the total legal services market growing to 10.3749 trillion won, revenue per solo practitioner has seen no growth in 19 years.
Regional imbalances
The discrepancy in market size between Seoul, where large firms are concentrated, and non-capital regions (especially Busan) is becoming severe. Securing region-specific niches, such as hosting maritime courts, is considered the last remaining opportunity to revitalize non-capital legal markets.
💼 Marketing Strategies for Solo Practitioners
1. Strengthen Naver Blog content marketing
The primary channel for solo lawyer marketing remains the Naver Blog. Post practical content on everyday legal issues (unpaid wages, divorce, real estate, damages, etc.) once or twice a week, while strictly adhering to advertising regulations (Attorney-at-Law Act Article 23). Operate with clear compliance standards: no "claims of expertise," no "inducing fixed contingency fees," and no "exaggerated or comparative advertising."
2. Optimize for Google SEO & AI Search
The search ecosystem is shifting from traditional search (Naver, Google) to AI-based search (ChatGPT, Google AI Overviews). Solo lawyers should consistently post reliable legal information to ensure their blogs and websites can be included in AI model training data. Additionally, clarify office locations, profiles, and contact methods in Google Business Profiles to increase exposure in local searches (region + legal field).
3. Manage client reviews and reputation
Actively manage ratings and reviews on lawyer platforms (LawTalk, LawAndB, etc.) that individual clients use during their research phase. Ask clients to write reviews after a case concludes, but do so without coercion. If negative reviews occur, prioritize restoring trust through sincere responses rather than legal counter-action.
🤖 Legal Tech & AI Tools
AI adoption by domestic law firms
Major Korean law firms have begun actively adopting generative AI-based legal tech:
- Shin & Kim: Introduced a generative AI legal advisory service from global legal tech company Harvey.
- BHSN & Yulchon: Operating a proprietary closed-system legal AI called "AiYul" and launched a commercialized version for contract AI review.
- Public Institutions: Promoting the adoption of AI legal assistants to secure CSAP certification.
Legal tech evolution: From search to automation
Domestic legal tech has evolved from simple "precedent search tools" to automation in contract management, regulatory response, and tax/financial compliance. In corporate legal departments, AI-based automation is already well-integrated. Solo practitioners should use AI tools as assistants (e.g., auto-drafting contracts, summarizing precedents) to speed up responses while emphasizing the specialized, human touch of a real attorney for legal advice.
Electronic contract platforms and solo practitioners
As AI-driven electronic contract automation (e-signatures, tracking status, legal validation) spreads, demand for basic contract review work is declining. Solo practitioners must differentiate their services through high-level negotiation support, preventative legal advice, and litigation strategy after a dispute arises.
🎯 This Week's Action Checklist
- Write one Naver blog post: Select one common legal issue (e.g., "Procedures to resolve unpaid wages") and write a ~3,000 character post while following compliance guidelines.
- Review Google Business Profile: Update office location, phone number, areas of expertise, and FAQs (especially regarding "availability to take on individual client cases").
- Check LawTalk/LawAndB reviews: Review at least 5 new entries from the past three months and write sincere responses to any negative feedback.
- Try one AI legal tech tool: Test questions related to your field on ChatGPT or a specialized legal AI platform to evaluate reliability and prepare materials for client consultation.
- Strengthen local legal networks: Attend one local Bar Association or legal professional community event to create opportunities for client referrals.
This briefing is based on information from the Legal Times (lawtimes.co.kr), Legal Times (legaltimes.co.kr), Busan Ilbo, Korea Economic Daily, and corporate disclosures from law firms and legal tech companies.
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.