Law.com is poised to reveal a significant redesign on June 16, restructuring the platform to enhance access to its extensive legal news and resource offerings. This overhaul moves from a previously siloed structure of separate ALM-owned publications towards a more unified, cross-publication approach centered around six key content pillars: the business of law, practice of law, corporate legal, legal technology, U.S. news, and world news. This content reorganization aims to create a more cohesive user experience by integrating global and U.S. news, highlighting the increasingly international nature of legal practice.
The redesign promises a more modern, mobile-friendly user interface, featuring a “sticky” navigation bar that remains visible for intuitive access while users browse the site. The platform has also been made mobile responsive, eliminating the need for separate apps and ensuring a streamlined experience across devices. Personalized content delivery is a focal point, with users able to follow specific topics, regions, law firms, and companies. This personalization fuels a customized homepage experience, daily digest alerts, and targeted content suggestions.
The technical upgrades extend to enhanced search capabilities. Law.com’s new federated search will access news, court documents, law firm data, and legal references simultaneously, using hit highlighting and content snippets for efficiency. This search experience will be complemented by the upcoming NewsVault subscription service, set to provide exclusive access to 42 years of archived content previously licensed to [LexisNexis](https://www.lexisnexis.com) and [Bloomberg](https://www.bloomberg.com).
Though the core subscription structure remains unchanged, Law.com will introduce a bundled research suite with the NewsVault launch in 2026. This transformation aligns with industry trends pushing towards greater content integration and personalization, better reflecting the needs of legal professionals in a globalized market. The redesign marks phase one of a larger transformation plan for 2025, focusing on further integrating Law.com with other ALM products to enhance user experience.
For further information, explore the full details of the new Law.com redesign here.