For attorneys and law firms

Your clients don't read. Give them audio they'll actually listen to.

Turn filings, settlements, and case updates into plain-English audioβ€”drafted with citations, reviewed by you, shared securely. Fewer confused calls. More informed clients.

Nothing is sent to a client without attorney approval.

Private links, audit trail, retention controls.

Script Editor
Your motion to compel discovery was filed today.
The defendant has 30 days to respond with the requested documents. (p. 4, ΒΆ2)
If they don't comply, we can ask the court to intervene.
Audio Preview
Update: Motion Filed Attorney-reviewed
2:34
Approved Share link expires in 7 days

Your phone rings. It's the same question. Again.

You spent hours on that motion. Your client skimmed it, missed the point, and now they're calling in a panic about something you already explained.

How many times have you explained what "discovery" means this week? How many of those calls were billable?

Your clients have time to listen on their commute. They don't have time to decode legal documents at their desk.

You shouldn't have to be a translator. You should be their attorney.

See how it works →

The workflow: draft → approve → share

Four steps from document to client understanding.

01

Create a matter

Set up client and permissions for the case.

02

Upload a document

Add PDFs or Word docs to generate a draft script.

03

Edit & approve the script

Review citations, refine language, then approve.

04

Generate audio & share

Create audio and send via secure, expiring link.

Citations included by default Approval required to share

What you get

A system designed for attorney control, not automation for its own sake. Before: repeated calls, confused clients. After: one audio update, lasting clarity.

Clarity clients can follow

  • Plain-English structure: What happened / What it means / What's next
  • Optional glossary ("What is a continuance?")
  • "What you should do now" checklist (attorney-authored)

You stay in control

  • Draft script first (nothing auto-sends)
  • Attorney edit + approve
  • Version history (what changed, who approved)

Grounded in the source

  • Line/page citations
  • "Show source" toggle for internal review
  • "Uncertain" flagging when confidence is low

Built for secure sharing + records

  • Expiring links + access controls
  • Listen receipt / activity log
  • Exportable audit record

Why audio explanations work better

Compare traditional client communication to LawyerAudio.

Traditional Communication
With LawyerAudio
πŸ“ž Phone calls: time-consuming, easily forgotten
πŸ” Audio clients can replay anytime
πŸ“„ Letters: dense, often unread
🎧 Clear, spoken explanations
πŸ“§ Email: buried in inbox, no engagement tracking
βœ“ Secure links with listen receipts
πŸ”„ Repeated explanations (often non-billable)
πŸ“‹ Create once, share consistently
🀷 "Did you get my email?" uncertainty
πŸ“Š Listen receipts show when clients engaged

The difference: You explain once. They understand. You have proof they heard it.

Built for how attorneys actually work

Attorney review required

Nothing reaches clients without your explicit approval. No auto-sends, ever.

Grounded in source documents

Every claim cites the page and paragraph. No hallucinations, no made-up facts.

Secure by design

Expiring links, audit trails, and encryption. Your data stays yours.

You control the message

Edit every word before it goes out. The AI drafts; you decide what clients hear.

A client experience that reduces confusion

What your clients see when they open your secure audio link.

Clients can listen anywhere: commute, waiting room, home
Key points summarized so nothing gets missed
Questions route to you, not an AI chatbot
Fewer confused calls and emails
Smith & Associates Attorney-reviewed
Case Update: Discovery Motion
2:34
Key Points
  • Your motion was filed today
  • Defendant has 30 days to respond
  • No action needed from you right now

Use cases

Client update after a filing

Send an audio recap the same day: what was filed, why, what happens next.

Explain a specific document

Discovery request, medical record, police report, motion: summarized with citations.

Internal driving brief

Listen to a matter recap before a hearing while in transit.

Ready to stop repeating yourself?

Join our beta program and help shape the future of attorney-client communication.