
Confido Legal operates an embedded payments and disbursements platform for law firms and legal technology companies.
Confido Legal is a Seattle-based embedded-payments company serving the legal market, powering payments for more than 1,600 law firms with 99.99 percent advertised uptime and routing client funds with built-in trust-account and compliance checks.
Positioned as both a law-firm payment processor and a developer platform for legal-technology partners, it markets credit and debit card processing, ACH, payment links, payment plans, subscriptions, and digital disbursements through a single GraphQL API.
Confido Legal is an embedded payment processing and disbursements platform designed for legal-technology companies and the law firms they serve, covering credit and debit card processing, ACH payments, payment links, payment plans, subscriptions, and digital disbursements.
It exposes a unified GraphQL API with built-in legal compliance, ready-to-use UI components and SDKs, and a sandbox partner environment, enabling legal-tech developers to embed compliant payments and money movement into their applications without retrofitting industry-generic platforms.
Confido Legal sees a future in which law firms do everything they used to do at their bank or third-party payment processor directly inside their case management systems, and positions itself as accelerating the pace of financial innovation in legal.
By adding financial flexibility and removing friction where lawyers and clients transact, the company aims to expand the pool of people who can access legal services and grow the addressable market for law firms.
Unlike industry-generic payment platforms, Confido Legal is purpose-built for the legal market, handling law-firm-specific needs such as multiple bank accounts, high-dollar transactions, a variety of payment methods, and the strict rules of professional conduct that govern how client money is handled.
Legal-tech partners integrate a single unified GraphQL API and go through one financial underwriting process with one partner, rather than stitching together many financial-technology vendors and retrofitting disparate industry-generic platforms for legal.