Trust & Transparency
Every answer includes clickable source citations. We never fabricate references, and our compliance documentation is publicly available. You can verify everything we do.
About Auxilis
We started Auxilis because we believed solicitors deserved better than generic AI tools that don’t understand the law they practise.
The Problem
Most legal AI tools are built for the US market. They cite American case law, reference federal statutes, and have no understanding of the UK legal framework that governs your practice.
General-purpose chatbots are even worse. They lack the precision solicitors need, hallucinate citations, and offer no guarantees about data privacy or GDPR compliance.
UK solicitors need tools that understand legislation.gov.uk, SRA guidance, UK GDPR, and the procedural rules that shape how law is practised in England and Wales. That’s what we built.
Our Mission
Security-first. UK-specific. GDPR compliant by design. We believe AI should amplify a solicitor’s expertise — not replace it. Every feature we build starts with a simple question: does this help a solicitor do better work, faster, without compromising their obligations?
We are not building a product for every professional in every country. We are building the definitive AI platform for one profession, in one jurisdiction, and doing it properly.
Values
Every answer includes clickable source citations. We never fabricate references, and our compliance documentation is publicly available. You can verify everything we do.
Documents are processed locally and never stored on our servers. End-to-end encryption, zero data retention, and a contractual guarantee that your data is never used for AI training.
Purpose-built for the UK legal system. We search legislation.gov.uk, SRA guidance, and court procedural rules — not US case law databases that have no relevance to your practice.
Designed around the workflows of practising solicitors, not generic productivity. From document analysis to research memos, every feature exists because a solicitor asked for it.