
Saga, which has its roots in Holland and Norway, has raised over €1.5 million in a Seed round to help the multi-capability AI productivity platform expand.
As we are seeing now with a growing number of broad start-up offerings, Saga can ‘orchestrate the full lifecycle of legal work’ and ‘offers transparent AI assistants, legal databases, and agentic workflows’. They will also have a Saga Word add-in later this month. They also noted that after bootstrapping they had crossed €1m ARR in 7 months after launch, and that just in September alone they grew their user base with 41% MoM, adding 20 enterprise customers.
The news comes right after Italy’s Lexroom – another full-service legal AI productivity platform – bagged a significant funding round, suggesting two things: A) that European legal tech experts are doing it for themselves, and B) that the choice of broad productivity platforms powered by tapping genAI skills is only growing wider, giving lawyers an increasing range of options.
That in turn complicates matters for the likes of Harvey and Legora, which both seek to carve up the productivity platform market across not just the large US and UK markets, but across all regions – at least if they are to meet their investors’ aspirations. And Europe – with its 27 nations – is a very significant region with plenty of law firms and inhouse teams. Interestingly, the company told AL that they also want to target Latin America.
If these younger European companies, perhaps with more economical pricing, can get embedded here then it will make a difference. As explored before, law firms don’t really need multiple productivity platforms if they offer a range of very similar capabilities, especially if they’re buying seats for all the lawyers in the firm.
Saga was founded in 2024 by a team with law firm and legal tech experience from Norway and the Netherlands, they said. The company conducted its commercial launch in the fourth quarter last year, when it introduced the Saga Enterprise product for medium-sized and large law firms, and Saga Solo which is tailored for individual lawyers and small practices, they explained.

Remco Visser, co-founder of Saga, commented: ‘Because many mid-sized firms and local champions lack the internal talent to lead GenAI adoption programs, our Amplify department provides training that enables legal professionals to actually convert traditional processes into AI-enabled workflows.’
Bosse Langaas, co-founder & CEO of Saga, added: ‘We are proud of the fact that we have successfully launched a robust AI-platform for legal professionals and won law firm clients in ten European countries without relying on outside funding. The funds raised from this Seed round are aimed towards product innovation and international expansion.
The Seed round attracted Angel investors in both Norway and the Netherlands. Saga is setting the stage for a Series A investment round in early 2026 to support the continued improvement of its products and to accelerate international expansion.
You can find out more about Saga here.
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Legal Innovators Conferences in London and New York – November ’25
If you’d like to stay ahead of the legal AI curve then come along to Legal Innovators New York, Nov 19 + 20 and also, Legal Innovators UK – Nov 4 + 5 + 6, where the brightest minds will be sharing their insights on where we are now and where we are heading.
Legal Innovators UK arrives first, with: Law Firm Day on Nov 4th, then Inhouse Day, on the 5th, and then our new Litigation Day on the 6th.


Both events, as always, are organised by the Cosmonauts team!
Please get in contact with them if you’d like to take part.
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