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Living rulebook · By state & specialty

The rules that govern your practice, kept current.

Statutory assembles a living rulebook of the exact statutes, agency rules, and rates for your jurisdictions — then pushes a precise delta the moment something you rely on changes, with a client-alert draft you can bill.

Every change cites the primary source. The exact section, the effective date, span-verified against the register — never a paraphrase.

The promise

Why Statutory

One missed regulatory change is a malpractice event. Statutory makes sure you never read about it second.

You already pay for currency — CLE, Westlaw, a research seat. What you can't buy off the shelf is a digest scoped to your exact practice, pushed when it matters, in language you can hand a client.

  • Scoped to your practice

    Your jurisdictions, your practice areas, your client types — the firehose filtered down to the sections you actually rely on.

  • Effective dates, tracked

    Every section is versioned with its effective-date history and the exact citation — so you know what changed, and precisely when it takes hold.

  • Output you can bill

    Each delta arrives with a ready-to-send client-alert draft — the artifact that turns a subscription into billable client communication.

What Statutory does

A reference desk that watches the registers so you don't have to.

Primary government feeds, monitored daily, mapped to your rulebook and synthesized into deltas you can act on — with a citation behind every line.

Living rulebook

Your rules, in one place

Onboarding builds a practice profile, then assembles a "your rules" wiki — each section a topic pinned to its primary source, versioned with effective-date history.

CA meal-break rulesIRS reasonable compFLSA overtime
Delta engine

Changes, pushed — not searched

Daily diff monitoring of statute and register feeds. When a section you rely on moves, you get the delta with effective dates and the affected parts of your rulebook flagged.

▲ threshold ↑ $58,656eff. 2026-07-01
Span-verified citations

Cite the exact section, or don't ship it

Every quoted span must string-match the retrieved source text; effective dates are extracted and cross-checked. Anything that fails verification is blocked and routed to a human reviewer — because in this market, one mutated citation is a product-killing event.

29 C.F.R. § 541.60026 U.S.C. § 162Cal. Lab. Code § 226.7
Primary sources

Open government feeds

Federal Register, eCFR, GovInfo, CourtListener, state registers and agency RSS — crawl-friendly and free of the publisher paywalls.

Billable artifact

From "a rule changed" to a client alert in your inbox

Each delta arrives by email and Slack with a drafted client alert — plain-language summary, the citation, the effective date, and what it means for the people you advise. Export to Word or PDF, edit, send, bill. The subscription pays for itself the first time you do.

How it works

Three steps to a rulebook that maintains itself.

01

Build your profile

Tell Statutory your jurisdictions, practice areas, and client types. It assembles your living rulebook, each section pinned to its primary source.

02

We watch the feeds

Daily diffs of statute and register feeds. A change is mapped to the exact sections it affects, then synthesized into a delta with effective dates.

03

You get the delta

An alert lands in your inbox and Slack — citation, effective date, affected sections, and a client-alert draft ready to export, edit, and send.

Pricing

One billable client alert pays for the year.

Priced for the individual professional who already pays out of pocket for currency — a fraction of a single-state research seat. Annual billing is the default.

Entry wedge

Core

$49 / mo

One jurisdiction bundle, unlimited client-alert drafts. Billed annually at $468.

  • Living rulebook for one jurisdiction bundle
  • Daily delta alerts by email & Slack
  • Unlimited client-alert drafts
  • Span-verified citations & effective dates
Most popular · the margin tier

Practice Pro

$99 / mo

Multi-specialty coverage and white-labeled client alerts — still less than half of a Westlaw Classic seat.

  • Everything in Core
  • Multi-specialty coverage
  • Effective-date history exports
  • White-labeled client alerts
Small firm

Small Firm

$149 / mo

Three seats on a shared rulebook for the practice. Add jurisdictions as you grow.

  • 3 seats, one shared rulebook
  • Everything in Practice Pro
  • Additional jurisdictions from $15–19/mo each
  • Shared effective-date history

Prices shown for reference ahead of launch. Statutory is pre-launch; final tiers and coverage may change.

Questions

Coverage, accuracy, and the line we won't cross.

Which jurisdictions and specialties do you cover?

At launch, Statutory covers federal sources plus a focused set of states — federal feeds (Federal Register, eCFR, GovInfo, CourtListener) are open and reliable, while roughly half of state registers are weekly PDF bulletins that take real work to parse. We are honest about this: we would rather cover federal and a dozen states deeply than claim all fifty and quietly under-deliver. The waitlist lets you tell us your jurisdictions and specialties so we prioritize the ones our first users actually need.

How accurate are the citations — and can you guarantee you won't miss a change?

Every quoted span is string-matched against the retrieved primary source, and effective dates are extracted and cross-checked; anything that fails verification is blocked from publishing and routed to a human reviewer. That makes the citations we ship trustworthy. What no monitoring tool can promise is perfect completeness — local ordinances, sub-regulatory guidance, and case law reinterpreting a statute can fall outside any feed. Statutory is a powerful first line of defense, not a guarantee that nothing was missed. Treat it as a tool that sharpens your judgment, not a replacement for it.

Is this legal, tax, or compliance advice?

No. Statutory is a research and monitoring tool that surfaces primary sources and drafts. It is not legal, tax, accounting, or compliance advice, and the client-alert drafts are starting points for a licensed professional to review, edit, and stand behind. You remain responsible for verifying every citation and exercising your own professional judgment before relying on or sending anything.

How is this different from Westlaw, ChatGPT, or a free agency newsletter?

Westlaw and Lexis are pull-based search — you have to go ask. Free agency newsletters are an unscoped firehose. Generic chatbots can't guarantee statute-level citation fidelity or effective-date tracking, and you can't bill on unverifiable output. Statutory is the missing middle: a personalized living digest scoped to your practice, with verified citations and a billable artifact attached to each change.

Statutory · Coming soon

Stop reading the register. Let it come to you.

Join the waitlist and tell us your jurisdictions and specialties. We're building coverage around the practices our first users need most — and you'll be first in line when yours is ready.