Seattle legal tech startup Supio lands $60M to help lawyers streamline data analysis
Seattle startup Supio raised $60 million to fuel growth of its software that helps lawyers quickly sort, search, and organize case-related data. The company is one of several startups using AI to streamline work for lawyers. Supio focuses on cases related to personal injury and mass tort plaintiff law (when many plaintiffs file a claim). It specializes in organizing unstructured data and letting lawyers use AI to pull relevant information. The company’s annual recurring revenue has grown 4X over the past year, according to TechCrunch. Sapphire Ventures led the round, which included Mayfield and Thomson Reuters Ventures. The company has… Read More


Seattle startup Supio raised $60 million to fuel growth of its software that helps lawyers quickly sort, search, and organize case-related data.
The company is one of several startups using AI to streamline work for lawyers.
Supio focuses on cases related to personal injury and mass tort plaintiff law (when many plaintiffs file a claim). It specializes in organizing unstructured data and letting lawyers use AI to pull relevant information.
The company’s annual recurring revenue has grown 4X over the past year, according to TechCrunch.
Sapphire Ventures led the round, which included Mayfield and Thomson Reuters Ventures. The company has 100 employees.
The latest funding comes after a separate $25 million round last year. Total funding to date is $91 million.
The company was co-founded in 2021 by longtime friends CEO Jerry Zhou and CTO Kyle Lam. They started their first software business, a mobile gaming app, in 2009, and later joined Avalara and Microsoft, where they worked on product and engineering teams for Office 365.
There are a number of other legal-tech startups across the Pacific Northwest, including Predict.law, Clearbrief, SingleFile, Theo AI, and Paxton.