Chamelio, a legal intelligence platform for in-house legal teams, said it has raised $10 million in seed funding as companies increasingly turn to artificial intelligence to streamline legal work.
The funding round was led by Work-Bench and Emerge Ventures, with participation from additional investors.
Chamelio uses AI to consolidate legal workflows into a single platform, replacing multiple disconnected tools used for tasks ranging from contract drafting to signing and post-execution management. The company says the platform allows legal teams to standardize and automate work while retaining oversight and governance.
The company currently serves about 100 customers, including high-growth startups and large enterprises such as Wiz, Socure, Lightricks, Integrity, Global-e, Cellebrite and Fiverr. Chamelio said the new funding will be used to accelerate product development and expand sales and marketing as it scales in the United States and internationally.
“We alleviate the corporate amnesia afflicting many legal departments,” said Alex Zilberman, CEO and co-founder of Chamelio. He said key context is often lost when contracts are signed or lawyers leave, and that the platform is designed to use prior negotiations and internal policies to inform ongoing legal decisions.
As in-house legal teams adopt AI, many rely on a growing mix of legacy document repositories and standalone AI tools that do not integrate with day-to-day workflows. Chamelio aims to address that fragmentation by unifying legal data, workflows and decision-making in one system.
Rather than focusing solely on document management, the platform converts unstructured legal materials — including contracts, policies and playbooks — into a structured intelligence layer. That data is then used across the legal lifecycle, from intake and negotiation to post-signature operations.
“Chamelio went from pilot to essential infrastructure faster than any legal technology we’ve seen,” said Jonathan Lehr, a general partner at Work-Bench. “They’re not just adding AI to legal workflows. They’re building the intelligence layer that allows those workflows to scale.”
Liad Rubin, a general partner at Emerge Ventures, said enterprise legal teams are moving quickly from testing the technology to deploying it at scale. He said the company’s vision and execution position it to become a core system for legal operations.
Chamelio was founded by executives with experience in legal operations and artificial intelligence. Zilberman previously held leadership roles at Pagaya and co-founded AnyVision. Chief operating officer and co-founder Gil Banyas has more than 15 years of legal experience, including serving as general counsel at AnyVision. Chief technology officer and co-founder Gal Lellouche previously founded an AI company acquired by Sage and later held senior AI leadership roles there.
Work-Bench is a New York–based seed-stage venture capital firm focused on enterprise technology. Emerge Ventures is an early-stage venture firm based in Tel Aviv that invests in technology startups.


