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Investments in Real Estate AI Startups: Orbital Leads Innovation in Real Estate

Investments in Real Estate AI Startups: Orbital Leads Innovation in Real Estate


Investments in real estate AI startups are accelerating the adoption of AI solutions in the real estate sector. Orbital, a London-based platform focused on real estate law and transactions, announced a €50 million Series B round led by Brighton Park Capital to support growth in the United States and the United Kingdom and to extend adoption across the real estate operations ecosystem.

The round saw participation from new investors including REV, RELX's venture capital arm; The LegalTech Fund; Moderne Ventures; and Grosvenor Group, in addition to existing investors such as JLL Spark, Outward and Seedcamp. Commenting, Will Pearce, co-founder and CEO: 'Real estate ownership is by far the world’s largest asset class, but the legal work that underpins it remains slow, fragmented, and largely manual. Orbital is changing this with AI tailored to Real Estate, making transactions more transparent and reliable for all involved parties.'

In the 2025-2026 period, funding activity shows a steady flow of capital toward AI-powered LegalTech, with a handful of significant growth rounds. At the European level, notable examples include Legora in Sweden with a €70.6 million Series B for a collaborative AI platform aimed at law firms and internal teams; Ex Nunc Intelligence, in Switzerland, with a €1.8 million pre-seed for its legal intelligence platform; Lexroom in Italy, which closed a €16.2 million Series A; Saga in Amsterdam with a €1.5 million Seed; Pandektes in Denmark with a €2.9 million Seed; and iPNOTE in Madrid with a €857k Seed. Together these deals total around €94 million in disclosed funding, excluding Orbital’s contribution.

This context underscores that Orbital's Series B stands out as one of the most important growth rounds in European LegalTech during that period, signaling growing investor appetite for niche AI legal platforms capable of operating over the long term with proprietary data and real estate-specific workflows.

'We recognized immediately that Orbital is filling a critical gap in legal AI. The focus on accuracy, real estate domain knowledge, and real workflows enables them to define a new category of AI-powered legal automation,' added Kevin Magan, Partner at Brighton Park Capital, who will join the board. Pearce continues: 'With their support, we accelerate our expansion in the US and broaden Orbital’s impact across the entire lifecycle of real estate assets.'

Orbital was founded in 2018 as an AI platform focused on real estate law, with the aim of making the transaction process more efficient for the world’s largest asset class. Company data indicate more than 200,000 residential and commercial transactions managed annually for over 5,000 industry professionals, including leading law firms, in-house legal teams, developers, title companies, and REITs.

Orbital has raised a total of €63 million to date. According to the company, clients include leading law firms and international companies in the real estate sector. Additionally, Orbital confirms its objective to expand its operational footprint: after opening its New York office in 2025, the company plans to double headcount and open additional hubs in the United States to serve clients more strategically.

The strategic relevance of the round goes beyond the numbers: Orbital sits within a trend where institutional investors seek specialized AI platforms capable of delivering analytics, automation, and compliance tools in regulated environments. Market analysis suggests such investments are helping to transform traditionally manual practices into automated workflows, reducing time and risk in complex transactions.

To frame the context, the discussion also extends to the European landscape, where numerous rounds have fueled a growing appetite for legal tech applied to specific sectors. Orbital, however, stands out for its focus on real estate, a market characterized by high fragmentation, large volumes of documents, and complex interactions between public and private parties. The involvement of the ecosystem of investors and operators who joined the round reflects growing confidence in the potential of deep tech applied to the real estate legal field.


Additional Context and Investors

Beyond Orbital's round, available data show a lively funding activity in the European LegalTech sector: Legora, Ex Nunc Intelligence, Lexroom, Saga, Pandektes, and iPNOTE have raised significant amounts in various rounds, totaling around €94 million, excluding Orbital’s contribution. This scenario highlights growing investor appetite for specialized legal platforms that combine AI, data analytics, and real-estate–oriented workflows.

In terms of operational impact, Orbital aims to provide a unique workspace for managing documentation in the lifecycle of real estate assets, with the goal of reducing manual tasks and improving transparency between professionals and clients. The adoption of AI technologies tailored to real estate law promises to remove bottlenecks, accelerate transactions, and increase the predictability of legal practices in the real estate market.

'This round brings together investors and operators who understand these challenges firsthand and share the belief that the real estate LegalTech category is ready for a transformation—with real-world transactions and AI-driven workflows,'

Pearce concludes: 'With their support, we will accelerate our expansion in the United States and broaden Orbital’s impact across the entire lifecycle of real estate.'


Final Thoughts: What This Means for Founders

The Orbital case offers key insights for founders working at the intersection of AI, legal tech, and real estate. First, focusing on real problems and concrete workflows is a critical differentiator in a market that is increasingly scrutinized. Second, the ability to attract investments from institutional partners and industry specialists demonstrates demand for solutions that combine compliance, automation, and knowledge sharing among professionals. Third, geographic expansion requires a solid strategy for regulatory localization and integration with local partners to fully seize opportunities in mature markets like the United States. Finally, handling sensitive data and regulatory compliance remain central: an effective real estate AI must meet high standards of security and transparency to earn trust among clients and regulators.

In short, investments in real estate AI startups like Orbital show not only financial leverage but also a technical and operational perspective that can guide strategic decisions for founders, venture firms, and real estate tech companies.

Origin: https://www.eu-startups.com/2026/01/londons-legaltech-orbital-raises-e50-million-series-b-to-expand-ai-platform-for-real-estate-law/

 


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