Legal Market Briefing — 2026-07-11
The legal market is undergoing a major shift as AI technologies reshape the industry amid 19 years of stagnant growth for solo practitioners. With polarization between large firms and smaller offices deepening, adopting effective marketing strategies and legal tech has become essential for survival.
Legal Market Briefing — 2026-07-11
📰 Key Legal Market News

Solo practitioners see 19 years of flat earnings; polarization widens
According to reports by the Korea Economic Daily, the average annual revenue per solo practitioner in 2025 was 325.5 million KRW, showing virtually no real growth since 2006. While the number of lawyers has reached 40,000, market demand remains stagnant, and opportunities for case retainers are shrinking as "pro se" (self-represented) litigation increases due to AI.
Legal tech is transforming law firm operations
In the first half of 2026, legal AI and automation technologies have been widely implemented in law firm practices. Yulchon has developed a closed-type legal AI called "Ai-Yul," while Sejong has adopted the generative AI service from the global legal tech firm Harvey to assist in legal advisory work. By offloading time-consuming tasks like case research and contract drafting to AI, lawyers are now free to focus on high-value work.

From search to full-scale automation
The domestic legal tech industry is moving beyond simple case search functions toward competition in automating overall corporate legal affairs, including contract management, regulatory response, and tax/financial compliance. We have reached a stage where entire contract processes—from electronic signing and status tracking to legal validity verification—can be automated through AI.
📊 Market Trends & Data
Surging number of lawyers vs. market stagnation
There are currently approximately 40,000 registered lawyers, with 32,168 of them practicing as solo practitioners, making up the vast majority. This is 1.3 times the number of accountants (19,059) and seven times that of patent attorneys (4,861). However, the average revenue per person stands at 325.5 million KRW as of 2025, marking 19 years without real growth. The income gap between large law firms and solo practitioners is widening, and the decline in litigation retainers due to AI automation is accelerating.
Expanding legal tech market
The global legal tech market is recording an annual growth rate of 12–15% as of 2026, and in Korea, AI adoption is spreading, led by large law firms and corporate legal departments. Meanwhile, the adoption rate of legal tech among solo practitioners and small offices remains low, hindered by issues of technical accessibility and cost.
💼 Marketing Strategies for Solo Practitioners
1. Content marketing to strengthen expertise
It is effective to publish legal information content regularly via Naver blogs and personal websites, while strictly adhering to advertising regulations under Article 23 of the Attorney-at-Law Act. Avoiding exaggerated or comparative advertising in favor of analyzing real cases, commenting on precedents, and reporting on legislative changes builds trust. Analysis of blogging patterns from April to May shows that updating 2–3 times per week effectively improves search rankings.
2. Naver and Google search ad optimization
Users looking for lawyers use specific search terms such as "[Region] [Name] Lawyer" or "[Case Type] Specialist Lawyer." Reports suggest that investing a monthly budget of 3–5 million KRW in long-tail keyword ads that include region and specialty can increase consultation conversion rates to 15–25%. In the era of AI search, operating Google search ads as well is advantageous for diversifying the client base.
3. Client review management and reputation marketing
Star ratings on legal platforms like LawTalk and SoseongBand, as well as the Naver legal consultation section, account for 30–40% of new client acquisition. It is crucial to have a system in place to encourage positive feedback after consultations and to respond professionally and promptly to any negative reviews.
🤖 Legal Tech & AI Tools
Automated contract review and risk analysis
Generative AI tools like Harvey and Ai-Yul can reduce the time spent on drafting contracts, searching precedents, and analyzing clauses by over 80%. Even solo practitioners can achieve the productivity levels of mid-sized firms by adopting cloud-based legal tech platforms (costing 500k–1M KRW per month). However, final review by a lawyer of all AI-generated output is mandatory, with data security and client confidentiality being key considerations.
Case management and automated scheduling platforms
CRM tools that automate administrative tasks such as client database management, tracking case schedules, litigation deadline alerts, and organizing evidentiary documents are now available at price points accessible to solo practitioners (300k–800k KRW per month). This allows firms to reduce support staff while enabling lawyers to focus on core legal work.
🎯 This Week's Action Checklist
- Write one Naver blog post: Analyze a recent precedent or legislative change related to your firm’s specialty (600–800 characters).
- Check Google Ads account: Select 10–15 keywords (Region + Specialty) and start with a monthly budget of 3 million KRW.
- Review LawTalk/SoseongBand ratings: Examine feedback from the last 3 months and send 3–5 messages encouraging client reviews.
- Try legal tech for free: Sign up for at least one free trial of a contract review AI or case management platform to test efficiency.
- Set marketing budget: Allocate 3–5% of monthly revenue toward online marketing (blogging, ads, reputation management).
This briefing is based on information from professional legal and tech media outlets including the Korea Economic Daily, The Law Times, The 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.