The End of the Billable Hour: Manifest OS Raises $60M Series A at $750M Valuation to Power AI-Native Law Firms
2026-05-08T01:02:18.229Z
The End of the Billable Hour: Manifest OS Raises $60M Series A at $750M Valuation to Power AI-Native Law Firms
For decades, the legal industry has remained a bastion of economic inefficiency, shielded from meaningful disruption by a single, archaic mechanism: the billable hour. This pricing model ties a law firm's economics to the time spent on a matter rather than the outcome delivered, effectively punishing efficiency and rewarding prolonged execution. By 2025, the results of this misaligned incentive structure had reached a breaking point. Billing rates for legal services rose by an average of 7.4%, with top-tier partners commanding up to $3,000 per hour. Consequently, an estimated 80% of American businesses and consumers simply cannot afford a lawyer when they have a critical legal need.
Enter Manifest OS. The New York-based technology company recently announced a massive $60 million Series A funding round at a $750 million valuation, aimed directly at tearing down the billable hour. Claimed as the largest upfront Series A in legal technology history, this round signals a profound shift in how venture capital views the $400 billion U.S. legal market. Manifest OS isn't building a SaaS tool to help existing lawyers bill more hours; it is building the foundational infrastructure to power an entirely new category of "AI-native" law firms built on predictable, fixed-fee, outcomes-based pricing.
The Broken System and the Founder's Catalyst
Manifest OS was born out of profound personal frustration. Founder and CEO Dan Mishin, a Ukrainian immigrant and serial entrepreneur who previously founded venture-backed companies like June Homes and NextStory Capital, experienced the friction of the U.S. legal system firsthand. Navigating the complex immigration process—from securing an O-1 visa to becoming a U.S. citizen—Mishin spent tens of thousands of dollars on legal fees.
Despite paying premium rates, he encountered opaque timelines, poor communication, and avoidable errors. The realization was stark: the problem wasn't incompetent lawyers, but a structurally flawed business model. According to American Bar Association industry surveys, lawyers working at small and solo practices (who make up roughly 78% of the market) spend up to two-thirds of their time on non-legal work such as administrative coordination, document gathering, and internal operations. They are overworked administrators rather than focused legal strategists.
A Record-Breaking Series A
The boldness of Manifest OS's approach has attracted some of the most prestigious names in Silicon Valley. The $60 million Series A was led by Menlo Ventures, with significant participation from Kleiner Perkins, First Round Capital, and Quiet Capital.
This $750 million valuation reflects immense investor confidence in Manifest's potential to capture outsized value in a massive, undisrupted sector. The capital injection will be used to aggressively scale its AI-native law firm model, expand its centralized back-office operations, and push its flagship brand, "Manifest Law," into the global sphere—specifically targeting the UK market where Alternative Business Structure (ABS) regulations are highly favorable.
The Anti-SaaS Strategy: Why Manifest Won't Sell to Traditional Firms
The most fascinating aspect of Manifest OS is its go-to-market strategy. At a time when legal AI startups are racing to sell "copilots" to big law firms, Manifest OS outright refuses to license its proprietary AI software to traditional incumbents.
"We made the hard choice to not sell our AI software to existing law firms who are often beholden to billing customers more hours as a means to better compensation," Mishin explained. Selling efficiency tools to a business model that profits from inefficiency is fundamentally contradictory. Instead, Manifest OS partners with forward-thinking attorneys to help them build and lead new, AI-native practices from day zero.
To achieve this without violating the U.S. legal system's stringent Rule 5.4 (which generally prohibits non-lawyers from owning law firms), Manifest OS leveraged Arizona's innovative Alternative Business Structure (ABS) program to incubate its first firm. The Manifest OS ecosystem is built on three core pillars:
- A Unified Brand (Manifest Law): Offering clients a guarantee of high-caliber, outcomes-based legal work with centralized quality control and fixed-fee pricing.
- AI-Native Software Stack: An end-to-end platform for client communications, collaboration, legal research, document drafting, and reporting. Human-supervised AI agents are embedded directly into workflows to eliminate administrative bloat.
- Centralized Back Office: Manifest OS handles the recruitment and training of paralegals and admins, managing client intake, business development, billing, and collections. This allows attorneys to focus entirely on legal advocacy and high-touch client strategy.
The Wedge: Dominating Business Immigration
Manifest OS launched its first specialized practice 18 months ago, focusing entirely on business immigration. Immigration law—encompassing O-1s, EB-1As, H-1Bs, PERMs, and Green Cards—is notoriously document-heavy, highly structured, and a critical pain point for corporations moving global talent. It is the perfect wedge for an AI-native approach.
The traction generated over the past year and a half has been staggering:
- Over 3,000 client engagements, ranging from individual startup founders to some of the world's largest technology companies, including Aisera.
- A network of over 100 top-tier immigration attorneys. Demand from the legal community has been overwhelming, with over 5,000 attorneys applying to join the platform. Manifest maintains a stringent acceptance rate of less than 1%, ensuring only highly experienced counsel (averaging 10+ years of practice) touch client cases.
- A 96% approval rate for talent-based visas, operating 15% higher than the national average of 81%.
- 3x faster client response times compared to traditional firms.
For enterprise clients, Manifest's software integrates directly with corporate HRIS platforms, providing HR teams with a real-time dashboard of their entire global workforce's visa statuses, compliance tracking, and automated document collection.
The Investor Perspective: The Uberification of Legal Supply
The thesis driving Menlo Ventures and Kleiner Perkins is rooted in fundamental economics: the artificial constraint of supply.
Menlo Ventures explicitly compared Manifest OS's potential to their early investment in Uber. Just as taxi medallions artificially capped the supply of drivers—keeping prices high and suppressing consumer demand—the traditional legal model caps the supply of quality legal throughput. By deploying AI to automate the two-thirds of a lawyer's day wasted on administrative tasks, Manifest dramatically increases the productivity and capacity of existing lawyers.
"Selling AI-native services is where a lot of the industry's value will be concentrated, and Manifest OS is uniquely positioned to build a category-defining market leader," noted Ilya Fushman, Managing Partner at Kleiner Perkins. Michael Bloch of Quiet Capital echoed this sentiment, highlighting that the real opportunity is "not giving lawyers one more tool, but using AI to provide and power better legal services directly."
Furthermore, Manifest OS fundamentally rewires the financial lifecycle of a firm. While traditional law firms distribute end-of-year profits as partner bonuses, leaving little for innovation, Manifest OS-powered firms reinvest those profits back into a centralized R&D engine. Over time, this compounding technological advantage will systematically drive down the cost of legal services while widening the moat against legacy competitors.
Strategic Implications & Future Outlook
Armed with $60 million, Manifest OS is moving rapidly to expand its footprint. A primary focus is international expansion. Because the demand for global mobility is inherently cross-border, Mishin confirmed that Manifest is actively applying for an ABS license in England and Wales to establish a UK presence later this year.
Beyond geography, Manifest intends to expand its AI-native infrastructure into other practice areas that suffer from similar administrative bloat and opaque pricing, such as family law, employment law, and eventually, complex litigation.
Conclusion
The $750 million valuation of Manifest OS is more than just a win for a single legal tech startup; it is a death knell for the traditional billable hour. By proving that high-quality legal work can be delivered faster, cheaper, and with higher success rates using an AI-native infrastructure, Manifest OS is exposing the inefficiencies of incumbent law firms. AI is not going to replace the strategic judgment of human lawyers, but as Manifest OS demonstrates, it is perfectly primed to replace the archaic business model that has held the legal industry back for over a century.
Start advertising on Bitbake
Contact Us