ChatGPT Prompts for Lawyers: Research, Drafting, and Client Communication — Faster
Legal work is language work. The research, the drafting, the client summaries, the emails that explain complex matters simply — these take hours that bill at the same rate regardless of whether you're at peak focus or not. These prompts compress the mechanical parts so you can spend your time on the judgment that only you can provide.
Legal research summary
Before diving into Westlaw or Lexis, get oriented:
"I'm researching [legal issue: breach of fiduciary duty / tortious interference / GDPR compliance / etc.] in the context of [jurisdiction and general facts]. Summarize the current legal landscape: the key elements a party must prove, the most common defenses, how courts have recently trended on this issue, and 3 specific angles I should research further. Flag any circuit splits or jurisdictional variations I should be aware of."
This is a starting orientation, not a finished memo. Verify everything through primary sources — but you'll start the research already knowing what you're looking for.
Contract clause drafting
For the clauses that eat time:
"Draft an [indemnification / limitation of liability / confidentiality / non-compete / force majeure] clause for a contract between [party A type] and [party B type] in the context of [industry/deal type]. The clause should: protect [which party]'s interests primarily, be enforceable under [jurisdiction] law, avoid the top 3 common drafting errors for this clause type, and be written in plain English without sacrificing legal precision. Include a brief note on any optional variations."
The "top 3 common drafting errors" prompt is worth its weight — it surfaces the issues before they're issues.
Client update email
Explaining legal complexity to non-lawyers is its own skill:
"I need to update a client on the status of their [litigation / transaction / regulatory matter]. Here is what happened: [describe in legal terms]. Write a client-facing email that: explains what happened in plain language without dumbing it down, states clearly what the next steps are and what the client needs to do (if anything), manages expectations honestly (include realistic timeline and any uncertainty), and avoids both legal jargon and unnecessary hedging. Tone: direct and professional."
The "avoid unnecessary hedging" instruction matters. Clients get frustrated by emails full of "could potentially possibly lead to" language.
Demand letter
The opening move in many disputes:
"Draft a demand letter from [client type] to [counterparty type] regarding [dispute: unpaid invoices / breach of contract / property damage / etc.]. Key facts: [summarize the relevant facts]. Desired outcome: [what the client wants — payment, remediation, specific performance, etc.]. The letter should: establish the legal basis clearly, state the demand specifically, set a reasonable deadline, and signal consequences without overcommitting. Jurisdiction: [state/country]."
Demand letters that get results are specific and credible. This structure achieves both.
Deposition question outline
Preparation before a deposition:
"I'm deposing [witness type: hostile witness / party defendant / expert witness / etc.] in a [case type] matter. Key issues I need to establish: [list 3-5 key factual or credibility points]. Outline a deposition question sequence that: starts with background to establish foundation, moves to the core disputed facts, and closes with questions to pin down the witness on their prior statements. Flag questions that are likely to draw objections and suggest fallback framings."
Deposition prep takes hours. This gives you a structured starting point in minutes.
Case summary memo
For internal use when bringing a colleague up to speed:
"Write an internal case summary memo for a new attorney joining this matter. Case type: [describe]. Parties: [describe]. Key facts: [list]. Claims/defenses at issue: [list]. Procedural posture: [where we are in the case]. Outstanding issues: [what's unresolved]. What we know and what we need to find out. Format for a reader who's smart but unfamiliar with this case. Under 1 page."
The "what we need to find out" section is the one most internal memos skip. It's the most useful part.
Engagement letter
For new client intake:
"Draft an engagement letter for a [practice area] matter between our firm and a new client. Key terms: [fee structure, scope of representation, billing frequency, retainer amount]. The letter should: clearly define scope (and what's out of scope), state our billing practices clearly, include appropriate disclaimers, and end with clear signature instructions. Jurisdiction: [state]. Tone: professional but welcoming — this is the first formal document they see from us."
Engagement letters that define scope clearly prevent scope creep conversations later.
Get the full toolkit
500+ prompts for legal, compliance, and professional services: https://toshleonard.gumroad.com/l/rzenot
Faster research. Cleaner drafts. Clearer client communication.
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