Wolters Kluwer Expands Legal AI Strategy With Libra Multi-Country Launch
- Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory has completed a significant phase of its European expansion by launching Libra, an AI-powered legal workspace, across nine different markets.
- The integrated solution is now live in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania.
- Libra by Wolters Kluwer is designed as a secure, integrated workspace that combines advanced AI capabilities with authoritative legal information.
Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory has completed a significant phase of its European expansion by launching Libra, an AI-powered legal workspace, across nine different markets. The rollout is part of a broader corporate strategy to scale domain-specific artificial intelligence that is grounded in trusted, author-generated content and embedded directly into professional workflows.
The integrated solution is now live in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Italy, Poland, Czechia, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania. The deployment followed a cross-border collaboration involving editorial, legal, technology, sales, marketing, and communications teams to localize the platform and integrate market-specific legal content.
Libra by Wolters Kluwer is designed as a secure, integrated workspace that combines advanced AI capabilities with authoritative legal information. The platform is intended to support legal professionals in several core areas of their daily operations, including research, drafting, review, and analysis, within a single environment.
The expansion follows the acquisition of Libra Technology by Wolters Kluwer Legal & Regulatory, which was announced on November 14, 2025. The acquisition and strategic partnership were valued at up to €90 million.
At the time of the acquisition on November 14, 2025, Libra reported a user base of more than 9,000 users across 800 legal departments and firms. The partnership was established to combine the innovation and agility of Libra Technology with the global reach and authoritative legal content provided by Wolters Kluwer.
The objective of the integration is to create a form of legal intelligence that understands law, nuance, and context. According to company statements, this approach is based on the premise that the most effective AI for the legal sector is built by practitioners for practitioners and grounded in real legal knowledge.
Market adoption of the tool has already begun among large-scale legal entities. In early 2026, the global law firm Taylor Wessing implemented Libra by Wolters Kluwer across its offices in Germany.
Oliver Betram, a Managing Partner at Taylor Wessing in Germany, stated that the adoption of state-of-the-art technology is a necessity due to the current state of the industry.
The legal market is in motion – and AI is accelerating the transformation of law firms and legal departments at an unprecedented pace.Oliver Betram, Managing Partner at Taylor Wessing in Germany
Wolters Kluwer has positioned the Libra workspace as a practitioner-oriented platform intended to maintain confidence in the accuracy and reliability of results. By utilizing author-generated content rather than relying solely on generative AI, the company aims to provide a secure environment for modern legal work.
The rollout of Libra represents a move toward a more integrated legal AI strategy, shifting away from standalone tools toward comprehensive workspaces. This strategy focuses on reducing the friction in daily legal workflows by consolidating multiple AI-driven tasks into one localized environment.
The company continues to use customer feedback as a primary driver for the development and ongoing releases of the platform to ensure the technology meets the specific needs of lawyers and in-house counsel.
