The 7% Solution: Why Most Legal AI Projects Fail to Deliver
While nearly every in-house legal team is aggressively increasing its artificial intelligence budget, only 7% have successfully moved beyond pilot testing to achieve measurable organizational results. A new global study of 528 legal leaders reveals that the divide between success and stagnation is defined by operational discipline rather than spending power.

The research, published in Axiom’s 2026 In-House Legal AI Report, highlights a disconnect between investment and impact. Although 83% of legal departments cannot verify if their AI expenditures yielded a positive return, many continue to pour resources into tools they have yet to master. The data suggests that the most effective teams treat AI as a core strategic program with dedicated ownership, while the majority treat it as an isolated side project.
Structural hurdles further complicate the landscape. In most corporations, the decision-making power regarding AI software lies outside the legal department, leaving general counsels to manage tools they did not choose. Furthermore, two-thirds of teams deploy general-purpose models like ChatGPT or Microsoft Copilot without specific legal configuration. This lack of customization, combined with insufficient staff training, means that even paid-for technologies remain underutilized.
Success, according to the report, depends on five specific habits: investing in ongoing training, running structured pilots, establishing governance before deployment, tying AI to concrete legal outcomes, and seeking external guidance. As firms struggle to extract value, 98% of leaders indicate that outside expertise is essential for navigating tool selection. Currently, legal departments demonstrate a clear preference for alternative legal service providers over traditional law firms to bridge this capability gap.
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