Contracts explained in simple terms

Upload any contract and AI explains it in simple terms, flags the risks and highlights unusual terms.

Legal terms explained
Flags risks
Spots unusual terms
Person reviewing a printed contract

Stop signing contracts you don't understand

Most people sign contracts without fully understanding what's in them. They're pressed for time, put off by legal language, or simply unsure what to look for.

GitLaw's AI reads any contract for you, flags unusual terms and explains every clause. So you always know what you're signing.

Understand any contract, in three steps

1

Upload or paste the contract

Drop in a doc or paste the text. Click Review and GitLaw reads the full document and begins its review instantly.

2

Read the summary and flagged terms

GitLaw highlights unusual terms and explains what each one means in simple terms.

3

Review suggested edits

Accept or reject AI-suggested edits clause by clause. Ask follow-up questions, then download, share, or send for eSign.

Instant review on any commercial contract

Clear explanation of every flagged clause

AI-suggested edits shown as tracked changes

Know what you're signing

The clauses that matter, surfaced instantly

GitLaw's AI reads the full contract and highlights unusual clauses and missing protections.

  • Risk and clause flagging
  • Clear explanations
  • Missing protections identified

Personalised to your business

GitLaw references your saved company details, preferences, and Playbooks. The more context you give it, the sharper the review.

  • Memory and Playbooks integration
  • Context-aware highlighting
  • Relevant to your document type
Personalised to your business

AI suggested edits, you choose

GitLaw generates suggested edits as tracked changes. You review each one and accept or reject it individually.

  • Suggested edits as tracked changes
  • Accept or reject clause by clause
  • Human in control throughout

Standard and Playbook-compliant alternatives

For every flagged clause, GitLaw suggests alternative wording. Standard replacements or Playbook-compliant versions, ready to use or adapt.

  • Standard clause alternatives
  • Playbook-compliant suggestions
  • Ready to use or adapt
Standard and Playbook-compliant alternatives

Ready to understand your next contract?

Join teams who know exactly what they're signing. Free to start.

Common questions about reviewing contracts with GitLaw

Is GitLaw's contract review free?

Yes. Reviewing contracts with GitLaw's AI is free to start. Upload any document and get an instant review in simple terms, without a subscription.

What does GitLaw actually flag?

GitLaw surfaces unusual clauses, terms commonly negotiated in similar agreements, and areas that differ from standard templates. Each flagged term is presented with plain-language context.

Does GitLaw tell me if a contract is legally enforceable?

GitLaw highlights the terms worth reviewing and explains what they mean in simple terms. It does not render a legal verdict. For complex or high-value agreements, we recommend involving a solicitor alongside GitLaw's review.

What types of contracts can GitLaw review?

GitLaw covers a wide range of commonly used commercial contracts, including service agreements, NDAs, freelance contracts, employment contracts, and more. It works with PDFs uploaded from outside GitLaw as well as documents created within it.

Can I ask GitLaw follow-up questions about the contract?

Yes. After the initial review, you can chat with GitLaw to ask about specific clauses or request plain-language context on any term.

How does GitLaw personalise the review?

GitLaw references your saved company details, preferences, and Playbooks to make the review more relevant to your business. If you have not set up your context yet, GitLaw will suggest onboarding steps to get the most from your review.

Can I send the contract for editing or signature after reviewing?

Yes. Once you have reviewed the contract and accepted or rejected suggested edits, download it, share it, or send it for legally binding eSign. All without leaving GitLaw.