Legal AI chat that answers from your document.
Ask Docly is for the contract, lease, employment document, or NDA you actually uploaded. It helps catch terms worth checking before signing, sending, renewing, or responding - with source references back to the document.
Answering from Vendor_Service_Agreement.pdf
Yes, as written. Final payment depends on acceptance, but the agreement does not define how long the client has to accept or reject the work.
Ask the next question after the review.
Docly works best when the question is tied to a specific uploaded document and a practical next step.
What does this clause mean in this document?
What should I check before signing, sending, renewing, or responding?
Where does the document mention payment, renewal, ownership, or deadlines?
What follow-up questions should I ask the other side?
Legal chat examples by document type.
Each page shows how Ask Docly stays anchored to the text of a real document category.
Contracts
Ask Docly follow-up questions about a contract, SOW, MSA, vendor agreement, or renewal after the document has been reviewed. Answers stay grounded in the uploaded text and source references.
See examplesLeases
Ask Docly about a lease after upload, from commercial lease obligations to apartment renewal terms. The chat answers from the lease text instead of pretending to be a general landlord-tenant law engine.
See examplesEmployment
Ask Docly questions after uploading an offer letter, severance agreement, restrictive covenant, or IP assignment. It explains what the document says and points back to the clauses it used.
See examplesNDAs
Ask Docly what an NDA says after you upload it. The chat focuses on the agreement's actual confidentiality language, exceptions, use limits, and term length.
See examplesHonest limits make the answers more useful.
Ask Docly is not trying to be a lawyer in a box. It is a first pass for document review, follow-up questions, and terms worth checking.
Grounded in your document
Ask Docly uses the uploaded document and source references. It is not a general law, statute, or case-research chatbot.
Built for the next practical question
Use it after the review to understand terms worth checking before signing, sending, renewing, or responding.
Not legal advice
Docly gives informational document analysis. For legal advice, negotiations, disputes, or local-law decisions, use qualified help.
See the public sample before uploading your own.
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