Disclosures

Version 2026-05-21b. These disclosures are a plain-English summary of how LawCrew works; they do not replace the Terms of Use, the Privacy Policy, or the Acceptable Use Policy.

LawCrew is a legal-technology service, not a law firm

Lawcrew.AI is a Singapore-based legal-technology service. We are not a law firm. We do not hold a practising certificate. We do not, and cannot, provide legal services or legal advice. Under the Legal Profession Act 1966 of Singapore, only advocates and solicitors with a practising certificate (and certain other narrowly authorised persons) may practise Singapore law (section 32), and it is an offence for any other person to act as, or hold out as being entitled to act as, an advocate and solicitor (section 33). LawCrew is neither, and we do not act as one. Our service is software that produces draft legal documents.

Pre-incorporation notice. Lawcrew.AI is currently operated in a pre-incorporation phase as a development-stage service. Once an operating entity is registered, these disclosures will be updated with the entity's full legal identity.

Drafts are drafts, not advice

Every document our system produces is a draft for your consideration. Drafts are not legal advice. They may be incomplete, inappropriate for your situation, or wrong on the facts or the law. In particular, AI systems can produce text that looks confident but is fabricated — invented case names, statutes, clauses, parties, or dates — and our verification gates reduce this risk but do not eliminate it. Before you sign, send, or act on any document, have a lawyer qualified in the relevant jurisdiction review it.

We can produce a draft; only a lawyer qualified in the jurisdiction whose law governs your matter can advise you on it. In Singapore that line is drawn by the Legal Profession Act 1966; equivalent rules apply in every jurisdiction where we offer the service, and we sit firmly on the technology side of all of them.

How AI generation works

Drafts are generated by AI specialist agents and checked by deterministic verification steps (citation-format verification, jurisdiction-tag consistency, PII detection, advice-language detection — a check that the draft does not contain wording that looks like legal advice on your facts — rule-based risk scoring against pre-defined thresholds, and conflict-of-interest re-check). These checks are software heuristics, not a legal opinion on your draft. If a draft fails our checks, we revise it up to five times; this five-attempt cap is set by our Terms of Use and is contractual, not just operational. If it still fails, we will offer to introduce you to an independent lawyer from our panel (see below), or to dispose of the draft, or you may instruct any external lawyer of your own choosing. Where the verification steps run to completion, a record of each step is attached to the draft so that you (or your reviewing lawyer) can audit how it was produced; if a step fails to run, that fact is itself recorded.

When you run a generation, your inputs are sent to the AI provider chain we have configured (which may include Anthropic models, Google Gemini models, and a local Claude command-line provider running on our own infrastructure) for the sole purpose of producing your draft. You consent to this each time you start a generation. See the Privacy Policy for the current sub-processor list and the Acceptable Use Policy for what you must not submit.

What you pay and what is non-refundable

Credits pay for the compute and verification work a generation consumes, which we incur whether or not the draft ultimately passes our verification gates. As a general rule, credits are not refundable. If a generation fails for a reason on our side (for example, an infrastructure error before the AI agents run), we will re-credit you; the detail is in the Terms. If you ask us to introduce you to a panel lawyer, that lawyer's fees are quoted by the lawyer and paid by you separately, with your prior approval, before the lawyer engages. Your rights under the Consumer Protection (Fair Trading) Act 2003 — including the protections against unfair practices (section 4) and false or misleading representations (section 5) — are not affected by anything on this page or in our Terms. The full commercial terms are in the Terms of Use.

Panel lawyers are independent

LawCrew operates a panel of independent lawyers whom you can engage through the platform when a draft cannot be produced to our quality threshold, or when you request human review. Every panel lawyer holds a current Practising Certificate issued under the Legal Profession Act 1966 of Singapore; if a lawyer ceases to hold a current Practising Certificate we remove them from the panel. Any lawyer-client relationship that arises is directly between you and the panel lawyer you engage, governed by that lawyer's separate engagement letter and fees. LawCrew is not a party to that relationship, and does not instruct the panel lawyer on what to advise — the lawyer's professional judgment, and the scope and terms of their engagement, are theirs alone.

LawCrew does not share in panel lawyers' fees, does not take a commission or referral payment from panel lawyers, and panel lawyers do not pay LawCrew to be listed. Where you ask us to, LawCrew may act as a collection agent for a panel lawyer's invoice, but the fee is the lawyer's and is set by the lawyer. We do not solicit work on any lawyer's behalf (consistent with the Legal Profession (Professional Conduct) Rules 2015, rules 39, 40 and 41).

Jurisdiction

LawCrew templates and drafts are produced for use under Singapore law. We do not produce drafts under Malaysian, Indonesian, Thai, Vietnamese, or Philippine law and do not interpret those laws. A Singapore-law draft used in another jurisdiction may be unenforceable or non-compliant there. You must have it reviewed (and, if needed, re-drafted) by a lawyer qualified in the relevant jurisdiction before you rely on it.

Data protection (Singapore PDPA)

LawCrew is subject to the Personal Data Protection Act 2012. We collect only the data you give us, use it only to deliver the service, and we do not sell your personal data. We may use aggregated and anonymised information about how the service is used to improve our templates and verification gates; this never includes content that identifies you, your counterparty, or your matter. You can ask our Data Protection Officer for access to your data, correction of inaccuracies, or withdrawal of consent at any time (which will lead to account closure and deletion of data we are not required to retain). Details of data storage location, retention, sub-processors, and your full PDPA rights — including the right to lodge a complaint with the Personal Data Protection Commission (you can write to our DPO at the address in the Privacy Policy first, or go directly to the PDPC at pdpc.gov.sg) — are in our Privacy Policy.