Jurisdiction-aware preparation, where available.
CourtRoom AI may surface informational references — statutes, court guidance, procedural notes — based on your selected location and case type. References are informational only, and coverage varies.
United States
Primary coverage. Federal-level concepts and broad civil-side reasoning across small claims, landlord/tenant, employment, consumer protection, and general contract disputes.
State-level support
Where available, references narrow further to the state you select. State support is uneven during launch — the simulation still runs without state-specific references; you just won't see those citations in the report.
International support
Some general legal concepts apply broadly, but jurisdiction-specific references outside the US are limited at launch. Always verify with local counsel.
Coming soon
Expanded state coverage in the US, plus pilot support for selected international jurisdictions. If you have a specific request, get in touch.
Read this before you rely on a reference
- Legal rules change. Statutes are amended, courts issue new rulings. References reflect what the AI knew at training time.
- AI may miss updates. A reference cited in your report may be outdated by the time you read it.
- References may be incomplete. Not every relevant statute or case will be cited.
- Court procedures vary. Local rules, judge preferences, and filing requirements differ between courthouses — even within the same state.
- Always verify. Use official sources (state courts, statutes, .gov sites) or a licensed attorney before relying on any reference.
Run your case and select your jurisdiction.
Coverage varies by location. Your report tells you what references are available + what to verify.
CourtRoom AI is for legal preparation and education only. It is not legal advice and does not replace a licensed attorney.