European sovereign legal AI company Noxtua has introduced what it describes as the market’s first Europe License, a new licensing model designed to enable legal professionals to work seamlessly across multiple European jurisdictions through a single Legal AI workspace. The launch marks a significant step toward simplifying cross border legal work in a continent defined by legal diversity, linguistic differences, and distinct national traditions.
The Europe License allows legal professionals to access legal research, analysis, and document drafting tools across multiple European jurisdictions using one interface and one license. The initial rollout covers the DACH region, Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, with additional European jurisdictions planned as Noxtua expands its publisher partnerships across the continent.
A fragmented legal landscape
Europe’s legal environment remains highly fragmented, despite shared constitutional values and common regulatory frameworks in certain areas. Law firms, corporate legal departments, and public institutions operating across borders often rely on multiple tools, databases, and licensing agreements to manage work in different jurisdictions. This complexity increases costs, slows workflows, and creates barriers to consistent legal analysis.
Noxtua’s Europe License is designed to address these challenges by consolidating access to multiple national legal systems into a single AI powered workspace. Legal professionals working on international transactions, cross border disputes, or regulatory matters can now conduct research and draft documents without switching between separate country specific systems.
Designed for cross border professionals
The new licensing model is aimed at international law firms, multinational companies, and European public institutions that regularly handle matters spanning several jurisdictions. By unifying access to legal content across borders, Noxtua positions the Europe License as a practical tool for professionals whose work reflects Europe’s interconnected economy and institutions.
Dr Leif Nissen Lundbækm, CEO and co founder of Noxtua, said the new license reflects Europe’s collaborative strength. He noted that many legal professionals require reliable and consistent legal information across borders and that the Europe License represents the next step in Noxtua’s European expansion. According to Lundbækm, sovereign European Legal AI can deliver practical solutions when built on strong partnerships and shared infrastructure.
Publisher partnerships at the core
A central element of the Europe License is Noxtua’s close collaboration with leading European legal publishers. The platform integrates authoritative legal content from publishers including C.H.BECK in Germany, MANZ in Austria, Helbing Lichtenhahn in Switzerland, Wydawnictwo C.H.Beck in Poland, Nakladatelství C. H. Beck in the Czech Republic, and Nakladateľstvo C. H. Beck in Slovakia. Additional publisher partnerships across Europe are expected to follow.
Prof Dr Klaus Weber, member of the executive board of the C.H.BECK Media Group, said the cooperative approach ensures that jurisdiction specific differences are fully reflected within the platform. He added that this model strengthens Europe’s diverse legal publishing ecosystem while enabling lawyers to access extensive legal expertise through a single interface.
Built as a sovereign European AI
Noxtua positions itself as a fully European project, spanning infrastructure, AI architecture, and governance. All data is processed exclusively in high security European data centres operated by partners such as IONOS and the Open Telekom Cloud. The Legal AI workspace is designed to meet strict professional secrecy, criminal law, and data protection requirements applicable to legal professionals across Europe.
The platform holds multiple certifications, including BSI C5, ISO 42001, ISO 27001, and ISO 9001, underscoring its focus on security, transparency, and compliance with European standards.
Gradual rollout to existing users
The beta phase of the Europe License will be made available free of charge to existing users of Noxtua’s country specific Legal AI workspaces. Access will be rolled out in stages over the coming days, allowing users to begin testing cross jurisdiction workflows within the unified environment.
As legal work becomes increasingly international, Noxtua’s Europe License signals a broader shift toward sovereign, cross border legal AI solutions designed specifically for Europe’s complex legal reality.
