
Noxtua is a sovereign Legal AI solution developed in Europe, originating from research at Oxford University and Imperial College London. Built in Berlin, it emphasizes European values of privacy, transparency, and sustainability. Noxtua is legally compliant, meeting GDPR requirements, hosted on a European cloud, and adhering to professional confidentiality laws. It is legally competent, trained on high-quality legal texts by legal professionals to ensure accuracy and minimize hallucinations. The company's business model appears to be SaaS, offering specialized AI tools for legal professionals.

Noxtua is a sovereign Legal AI solution developed in Europe, originating from research at Oxford University and Imperial College London. Built in Berlin, it emphasizes European values of privacy, transparency, and sustainability. Noxtua is legally compliant, meeting GDPR requirements, hosted on a European cloud, and adhering to professional confidentiality laws. It is legally competent, trained on high-quality legal texts by legal professionals to ensure accuracy and minimize hallucinations. The company's business model appears to be SaaS, offering specialized AI tools for legal professionals.
Product: Sovereign Legal AI platform for legal research, document analysis and drafting
Headquarters / Build: Built in Berlin; hosted on EU/German infrastructure
Founding / Origins: Founded 2017 out of research at University of Oxford and Imperial College London
Recent funding: $92.2M Series B reported April 2025
Team size: 19 employees (reported)
Legal research, document analysis and drafting for lawyers and law firms with emphasis on compliance and minimizing hallucinations.
2017
Legal technology / Artificial intelligence
12,000,000 (approx.)
Reported Series A (~€10M) and prior financing rounds leading to ~€19.5M total at that time.
92,200,000 (approx.)
Series B reported at $92.2M with participation from additional strategic investors including Northern Data Group, CMS, and Dentons.
“Participation from strategic legal-industry investors (e.g., C.H. Beck, law firms CMS and Dentons) indicating interest from legal publishers and firms”