Legal research under time pressure: How AI technology is changing everyday work in law firms
Legal work is often associated with considerable time pressure. Complex issues, short deadlines and high demands on precision and completeness make legal research in particular a challenge. Those who rely on classic database searches often lose a lot of time – with the risk of overlooking important information or not completely capturing it.
Artificial intelligence offers a promising solution, more precisely: Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG). This technology combines the speed of modern search systems with the quality of context-based text generation – and opens up new opportunities for legal research.
What is Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG)?
RAG combines two powerful processes:
The result: legally precise, comprehensible answers in the shortest time. What such a system looks like as a finished product, our project shows Rentminderung-urteil.de.
Practical example: Rent reduction in case of mold attack
An example from the rental law shows the potential of this technology:
Question:
“Which rent reduction is justified if mold occurs in the bedroom of an old building apartment and the landlord does not respond for three months?”
Classical research:
- Time-intensive review of various judgments and comments
- Manual testing and comparison of similar cases
- High risk of overlooking relevant information
Research with RAG:
- Answer within a few seconds:
‘AG Charlottenburg’: 20% rent reduction at Untactivity of the landlord.“ - Reference to and presentation of comparable judgments
Result: A search that could previously take hours now succeeds in seconds – with higher precision and reliable documentation.
Semantic search instead of keyword entry
A major advantage of RAG lies in the type of information search. While classical systems Keywords are dependent, RAG works with semantic analysis. This means that AI recognizes connections and meanings, even if terms do not exactly match.
Example: Rent reduction for mold in the bathroom
- Keyword based search: Results only with direct combination such as “mold + bath”
- Semantic Search with RAG: Also takes into account related terms such as “moisture”, “fungus infestation”, “moderate odor” or “construction defects”
This results in significantly more substantiated research results, such as:
- Judgments on “Wetness due to structural defects”
- Expert articles on causes and legal consequences of mold formation
| Advantage | Benefits in everyday practice |
|---|---|
| Time savings | Research up to 80% faster |
| 🔍 Better hits | Thematically relevant results instead of pure keywords |
| ⚖️ Legal security | Clear, verifiable answers with references |
| 📝 Stronger pleadings | Sound, comprehensible argumentation |
| 🤝 Client satisfaction | Fast, clear and sound communication |
Application in other areas of law
The application possibilities of RAG go far beyond the tenancy law. The technology is also particularly suitable for:
- Contract law (e.g. interpretation of GTC or contractual clauses)
- Employment law (e.g. in the case of dismissals or warnings)
- Compensation and building rights
- Establishment and maintenance of internal knowledge databases in law firms or legal departments
RAG thus creates real added value in all areas where legal information is needed precisely, quickly and comprehensibly.
Conditions and limits
As powerful as RAG is – some prerequisites must be observed for successful use:
- One structured and current database, ideally tailored specifically to the respective area of law
- One AI that trains on legal language and argument patterns is:
- Careful and precise Issues, to achieve relevant results (keyword: Prompt Engineering)
Importantly, RAG does not replace a legal examination or a professional decision. It is a powerful tool – but not a fully automated solution.
Conclusion: Working more efficiently with AI – the future of legal research
RAG marks a paradigm shift in legal research. A complex, error-prone task becomes a targeted, AI-supported dialogue with knowledge and data. Lawyers, corporate lawyers or academic employees can thus focus more on analysis, strategy and client advice – research becomes a secondary issue, not a time-waster.
Legal work remains what it always was: demanding and responsible. With AI, it only becomes more efficient.
Find out more: How we implement RAG systems from idea to operation can be read on our services page AI solutions: RAG systems & AI agents.
Would you like to implement this in your company? We support you pragmatically – from the idea to the operation.