Indian legal AI platform start-up Jurisphere raises $2.2m in funding round

Jurisphere plans to use the funds to expand its contract drafting and review platform globally
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The Jurisphere team Jurisphere

Indian legal AI platform start-up Jurisphere has secured $2.2m in fresh funding.

The financing round was backed by Indian-based investors InfoEdge Ventures and 8i Ventures, alongside institutional investors Flourish Ventures and Antler.

Jurisphere said it plans to use the funds to expand its platform globally and build what it describes as the “world’s largest network of AI-native lawyers”. Its platform provides AI-powered contract drafting and review services.

The start-up says that over the past year its platform has been used by more than 500 teams across law firms, enterprises and public institutions.

Varun Khandelwal, the co-founder of Jurisphere, said the next phase of legal AI is about “enabling execution”, as opposed to being driven purely by productivity gains.

He added: “By combining AI with a network of legal professionals, we are building a platform that brings structure, speed and reliability to how legal work gets done.

“Legal outcomes do not come from software alone. They come from how decisions are made over time. We are building systems that continuously learn from real-world execution, understand business context and guide work as it unfolds.”

Chinmaya Sharma from InfoEdge Ventures said: “Jurisphere is addressing a critical gap in the legal ecosystem by bridging advanced AI workflows with real-world execution. Their focus on outcomes, rather than just tools, positions them strongly as the category evolves.”

Jurisphere is based in Noida, India and was founded three years ago by brothers Varun and Manas Khandelwal, alongside Samut Ghosh.

Varun Khandelwal was previously an associate at law firm AZB & Partners for almost four years before co-establishing Jurisphere.

Manas Khandelwal previously spent three years with Massachusetts-based software firm HubSpot, with his last role being principal account executive.

Sumit Ghosh was a software engineer for Magnify Labs for eight months before co-creating Jurisphere, and prior to that held the same role for a year at another software firm, Solvent Protocol.

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