Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
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Lexion
Best overallFor most everyday users, neither Lexion nor LinkSquares is a good fit—they are enterprise legal tools, not consumer AI. Lexion wins for speed and email-based intake if you need a quick contract management setup, while LinkSquares offers deeper AI clause analysis for large legal teams. The single biggest difference: Lexion is easier to deploy quickly, but LinkSquares has more powerful document analysis for complex contracts.
Lexion
LinkSquares
Scores at a glance
Choose Lexion if
Choose LinkSquares if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Lexion | LinkSquares | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No, neither tool has a mobile app. You can only access them through a web browser on a computer.
Neither is ideal—both are enterprise tools. Lexion is the lesser evil if you can afford it, but you'd be better off with a simpler, cheaper option like ContractWorks or even Google Drive with manual tracking.
No. LinkSquares is designed for large legal teams with complex contract needs. Small businesses will pay for features they won't use and struggle with the lengthy setup.
Lexion is much easier—you connect your email and start tagging contracts. LinkSquares requires IT help, data migration, and training sessions.
LinkSquares has strong OCR for low-quality scans. Lexion works with PDFs but may struggle with poor-quality scans.
Lexion wins for speed and simplicity; LinkSquares wins for deep analysis—but neither is right for most everyday users.
If you're an everyday user or small business, skip both—they're built for big legal teams. But if you must choose, Lexion is faster and friendlier for non-experts, while LinkSquares is only worth it if you have a large budget and complex contracts. Always ask for a demo and pricing before committing.
Detail pages: Lexion · LinkSquares