

In a market crowded with AI tools that offer little more than repackaged language models, NYAI has arrived with something meaningfully different. India’s legal and compliance intelligence platform has formally launched the country’s first Legislation-Verified Drafting Ecosystem. This platform does not merely generate legal documents but continuously verifies them against applicable Indian legislation in real time.
The pain points these address are ones every Indian lawyer knows intimately. For decades, legal drafting has carried an inherent risk: a document could be meticulously drafted, technically sophisticated, and yet fail to account for a recent statutory amendment or a notified provision — a gap that only surfaced during senior review or, worse, in an adverse judicial finding. Statutory verification was a step that was either deferred or outsourced to the judgment of a more experienced colleague. NYAI has engineered this step directly into the act of drafting itself.
At the heart of the platform is what NYAI calls its Intelligence Layer — a proprietary statutory verification engine that operates concurrently with the user’s drafting process. As a lawyer drafts a shareholders’ agreement, employment contract, loan instrument, commercial lease, or licensing arrangement, the engine simultaneously cross-references the evolving document against the corpus of applicable Indian legislation: parent statutes, subordinate rules and regulations, subsequent amendments, and notified provisions.
The CTO of NYAI Dawood Sangameshwari shares,
“As a user drafts any legal instrument, NYAI’s intelligence layer simultaneously cross-references the evolving document against the corpus of applicable Indian legislation — the parent statutes, the rules and regulations framed thereunder, subsequent amendments, and notified provisions. The draft is not merely generated. It is continuously tested against the law.”
The defining feature — and the one that represents a genuine first in the Indian legal technology market — is real-time legislative suggestion delivered at the clause level, before the user closes on the draft or shares it with a counterparty. Critically, these are not analogical suggestions or precedent-based recommendations. The verification is anchored to legislative reference, making every suggestion traceable, explainable, and legally grounded.
The implications are practical and immediate. The traditionally multi-stage workflow — draft, statutory review, revision, re-verification — collapses into a single intelligent process. Senior lawyers are freed from the mechanical task of statutory spot-checks, and junior lawyers gain a built-in safeguard that reduces the risk of consequential errors slipping through.
For a disputes lawyer drafting a settlement deed or a transactional lawyer completing an acquisition, this translates directly into reduced residual legal risk. This kind previously went undetected until it was too late. The gap between a platform that drafts and one that simultaneously verifies the draft against operative Indian statutes is, as the NYAI team frames it, the gap the Indian legal tech market has long needed to close.
Vikrant Labde, Co-Founder, NYAI, states,
“The platform does not substitute legal judgment. It arms that judgment, in real time, with the precise legislative text against which the draft will ultimately be measured if contested.”
Dr Chinmay Bhosale, Co-Founder, NYAI, adds,
“The intent was to give qualitative, intelligent output to lawyers and help them focus on what matters most — legal strategy and personal judgment. At NYAI, explainable AI is at the core of our product engineering. The eventual goal is to automate trust at scale.”
What NYAI is positioning itself as — and what distinguishes it from the wave of LLM-wrapper tools that have flooded the legal tech market — is legal intelligence infrastructure. Documents and complex legal workflows are generated in verified alignment with Indian law as it currently stands, not as it existed at the time the model’s training data was collected.
The founding team’s legal and technological depth is not incidental to the product — it is embedded in its architecture. The result is a platform that reflects genuine legal ecosystem maturity alongside technological excellence, a combination the Indian legal tech sector has long needed and one that signals what home-grown legal AI can deliver when built with domain seriousness.
As Nikhil Ambekar, Co-Founder, NYAI, states,
"The founding team’s legal and technological depth is not incidental to the product — it is embedded in its architecture. The result is a platform that reflects genuine legal ecosystem maturity alongside technological excellence, a combination the Indian legal tech sector has long needed and one that signals what home-grown legal AI can deliver when built with domain seriousness."
NYAI is India’s legal and compliance intelligence platform, built to serve the needs of legal professionals navigating the complex Indian statutory landscape. The platform combines advanced AI with deep legislative expertise to deliver verified, explainable, and actionable legal intelligence. NYAI is founded by Vikrant Labde, Adv Dr Chinmay Bhosale, and Nikhil Ambekar, with Dawood Sangameshwari serving as Chief Technology Officer.