Harvey does not announce itself. It advances. Quietly, deliberately, like a closing argument built on facts the room already knows. Founded in San Francisco in 2022 and named after Harvey Specter with intent, the company was never chasing novelty. It was chasing leverage. Legal work has always been governed by precedent, pace, and risk. Harvey asked what happens when speed becomes defensible and accuracy becomes scalable. That question now sits at the center of startup news investors are reading closely.
On February 9, 2026, Forbes reported that Harvey is in talks to raise $200M at an $11B valuation, both unconfirmed, with Sequoia Capital and GIC said to be leading. Harvey declined to comment. Sequoia declined. GIC did not reply. In this market, silence is not a gap. It is a tell. When numbers move this fast and words do not, the leverage is already priced in.
Winston Weinberg, CEO and Co-Founder, came to the problem as a former lawyer who understood friction before it showed up on a balance sheet. Gabriel Pereyra, President and Co-Founder, approached it as a Google AI researcher fluent in probability and systems. Law and language. Judgment and models. That pairing explains why Harvey feels less like software layered onto firms and more like legal work compressed into its most decisive form.
By the end of 2025, Harvey reached $190M in ARR, nearly doubling contracted revenue in under 6 months. 50 of the AmLaw 100 are customers, followed closely by corporate legal teams that care less about demos and more about outcomes. The product spans AI-assisted research, drafting, secure document review, cited knowledge, and workflow automation. Not as features, but as time recovered. Harvey does not sell tools. It sells minutes back to people whose minutes decide outcomes. That distinction is why it keeps showing up in serious startup news conversations.
Capital followed conviction. Sequoia has been in since Series A. Elad Gil co-led the Series B. Kleiner Perkins and Coatue led the Series E. Andreessen Horowitz led the $160M Series F at an $8B valuation in late 2025, with David George calling Harvey the de facto leader in AI legal assistants. Conviction, founded by Sarah Guo, stayed in. OpenAI Startup Fund stayed in. This is not rotational capital. It is repeat behavior.
John Haddock joined in 2025 as CBO after a decade scaling Stripe. That move was not cosmetic. It was structural. Legal is conservative until it is not, and when trust locks in, volume follows. Haddock’s arrival signaled readiness for scale where credibility and throughput meet.
If this round closes, Harvey will have moved from a $715M valuation in late 2023 to a reported $11B in just over 2 years, roughly 15x in 26 months. Numbers like that invite skepticism. They should. But they also demand attention. Foundation model providers are circling the legal market. Sovereign wealth capital is watching. Law firms are already embedded. Harvey is not forecasting the future of legal AI. It is documenting it, exhibit by exhibit, inside the flow of startup news that actually moves markets.


