Legal spend management is the discipline of controlling, tracking, and analyzing what a corporate legal department spends — primarily on outside counsel, but also on legal tech, expert witnesses, eDiscovery vendors, and court filings. For most in-house teams, outside-counsel spend is the largest controllable cost line in the legal budget, often 60-80% of total. Legal spend management tooling and processes are how Legal Ops keeps that line predictable and defensible to the CFO.
The four levers of legal spend management
- E-billing. Outside counsel submit invoices electronically in a standard format (LEDES is the dominant standard). E-billing systems enforce billing guidelines automatically — no block billing, no first-class travel, no associate work without supervision approval.
- Matter budgeting. Every matter has a budget agreed at engagement. Spend is tracked against the budget in real time; overruns trigger alerts and conversations with the responsible firm.
- Rate management. Negotiated rates per timekeeper per firm are stored; invoices that bill against off-card rates are auto-flagged.
- Alternative fee arrangements (AFAs). Where appropriate, replace hourly billing with fixed fees, capped fees, or success fees. Reduces both cost variance and the perverse incentive to pad hours.
Standard outside-counsel guidelines (the document each firm signs at engagement) bake all four into the relationship from day one. The e-billing system enforces what the guidelines specify.
E-billing and invoice review
Pre-AI, invoice review was a Legal Ops or junior attorney task: scan each line for billing-guideline violations, flag the ones to push back on, write the firm a letter explaining the deductions. Realistic catch rate: 5-10% of true leakage.
Modern legal-spend platforms (Brightflag, Onit, SimpleLegal, Mitratech CounselLink, BusyLamp, Wolters Kluwer Passport) automate the rule-based portion — block billing, vague task descriptions, off-card rates, after-hours travel — and increasingly add LLM-based review for things like:
- Scope creep (“did this work actually fall within the engagement letter?”)
- Duplicative timekeepers (multiple attorneys billing for the same review)
- Disproportionate task time (40 hours on a one-page motion)
Catch rates on AI-augmented invoice review run 25-50% of leakage in well-run programs, with 5-15% of total outside-counsel spend recovered or never invoiced.
Alternative fee arrangements (AFAs)
AFAs are any non-hourly billing structure. The common forms:
| Type | How it works | When it fits |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed fee | Single price for a defined scope | Routine, well-bounded work (NDAs, standard motions) |
| Capped fee | Hourly billing up to a hard cap | Mid-uncertainty work where the cap shifts overrun risk to the firm |
| Phased fee | Different fixed fees per matter phase | Litigation matters with predictable phase structure |
| Success fee | Fee depends on outcome (settlement amount, case dismissed) | Plaintiff-side or contingent matters; less common in-house |
| Volume discount | Discount on hourly rates above a volume threshold | Long-term firm relationships with high volume |
AFAs work when the matter scope is predictable enough that the firm can price it confidently. They fail when the scope keeps changing (a typical M&A deal) or when the matter has high tail risk the firm can’t price (bet-the-company litigation).
How to reduce outside-counsel spend
The standard playbook in 2026:
- Convergence. Reduce the number of outside firms from 30+ down to a panel of 5-8 preferred firms. Fewer relationships, more leverage on rates and AFAs.
- Bring routine work in-house. A first-pass NDA review is now $0 when handled by Spellbook or Claude plus a paralegal. Pull it back from outside counsel entirely.
- AFAs on the predictable book. Move 30-50% of routine work to fixed or capped fees.
- AI-augmented invoice review. Modern e-billing tools recover 5-15% of total spend.
- Quarterly Spend Reviews with each panel firm. Look at run-rate, look at rates, look at where AFAs failed, look at what’s coming. Surface conversations early, not at year-end.
Together, these typically reduce outside-counsel spend by 20-30% over 18 months in mature programs, without reducing the legal team’s coverage of the business.
Related
- What is Legal Ops? — the function that owns legal spend management
- Matter management — the system that holds the matter budgets
- Contract lifecycle management — pulls routine contract work in-house, reducing outside-counsel volume