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Harvey vs LexisNexis Protégé

pairwise Last updated 2026-05-02

Compare side-by-side

Harvey LexisNexis Protégé
Pricing custom custom
Score
8.8
7.9
AI-native Yes Yes
MCP No No
API Yes No
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Harvey and LexisNexis Protégé are both pitched at the AmLaw and Magic Circle market, but the bet underneath each is different. Harvey is a horizontal AI platform tuned on your firm’s documents. Protégé is LexisNexis’s bet that “AI plus the world’s largest legal database, with linked citations and Shepard’s signals” beats a pure model play. The choice depends on whether your differentiation is your own precedent or your access to authoritative law.

Where Harvey wins

  • Firm-specific intelligence. Harvey trains on your house style, your precedent, your playbooks. Protégé is anchored to the Lexis corpus — great for breadth, less personalized to your firm.
  • Workflow flexibility. Harvey lets firms build bespoke Workflows for diligence, regulatory matrices, and bespoke practice areas. Protégé’s agentic features are tightly bounded to research, drafting, and summarization patterns.
  • Frontier-model velocity. Harvey moves at the pace of frontier model releases. LexisNexis ships on enterprise software cadence — slower, more deliberate.

Where Protégé wins

  • Linked citations to Lexis. Every output ties to the Lexis database with Shepard’s treatment, statutes, and secondary sources. For research-heavy work, this is structurally better than Harvey’s free-floating answers.
  • Existing Lexis customers. If your firm is already a Lexis shop, Protégé sits inside the same contracts, the same SSO, the same training. Adoption friction is much lower than dropping Harvey in cold.
  • Authoritative grounding. Hallucinations are bounded by the Lexis content layer. Harvey’s safeguards are model-and-prompt-level, which is competent but less defensible to skeptical partners.

Pricing reality

Both are enterprise-priced, but the structures differ. Harvey is a standalone six-figure annual commitment plus implementation. Protégé bundles into existing Lexis enterprise contracts — for a firm already spending heavily on Lexis, the marginal cost can be modest. Many AmLaw firms run both during a 12-18 month evaluation, then consolidate.

Verdict

  • Pick Harvey if your differentiation is bespoke workflows, your partners want frontier-model capability, and you’re willing to invest in fine-tuning on firm data.
  • Pick Protégé if you’re a Lexis-centric firm, you value citation-linked outputs above raw model capability, and your work is research- and regulation-heavy.
  • Use both if you’re an AmLaw 50 firm running real comparative pilots — that’s the actual buying pattern.

The single mistake to avoid: choosing on demo wow-factor. Harvey demos better; Protégé wears better in research-heavy practice. Pilot the boring work.