Rapidly expanding legal AI startup Spellbook secures US$40 million in debt financing from Royal Bank of Canada to acquire smaller competitors struggling in the generative AI market.
Company Growth and Product Overview
The St. John’s-based firm, officially Dialog Enterprises Inc., launched one of the earliest generative AI tools for lawyers in 2022. Its AI copilot, powered by large language models including OpenAI’s GPT-5, enables lawyers and corporations to draft, edit, and review contracts directly in Microsoft Word.
Spellbook triples its revenue in 2025 and projects US$100 million in annual recurring revenue by year-end, according to CEO and co-founder Scott Stevenson. The company serves over 4,000 customers across 80 countries, including Nestlé SA, Dropbox Inc., eBay Inc., AtkinsRéalis Group Inc., and Franklin Templeton.
New Partnerships and Expansion Plans
Spellbook announces a two-year exclusive partnership with the Canadian Bar Association, providing AI-powered contract tools to its network of 40,000 lawyers, judges, notaries, and law students.
With a current team of 150, the company plans to hire 100 more employees in 2026 amid strong market positioning.
Acquisition Strategy
Dozens of smaller AI firms contact Spellbook for potential buyouts after failing to establish market traction. The company taps RBC’s innovation banking unit, RBCx, for a credit line targeting revenue-generating contract AI providers in Canada and the U.S.
Spellbook focuses on acquiring customers and talent through product purchases and “acqui-hires,” rather than integrating rival technologies. “It’s a good strategy for us to bolster our team and reach greater maturity quickly to seize opportunities,” Stevenson states.
The firm anticipates spending up to US$60 million in cash and stock on five targeted deals over two years, with two acquisitions under review. It plans to offer significantly discounted multiples to companies seeking investor exits amid falling software valuations.
RBC Support and Prior Funding
Tony Barkett, head of banking at RBCx, praises Spellbook’s technology, growth, market position, management, and investors. “Using this debt to widen their moat will strengthen them further,” he says.
This debt follows a US$50 million venture capital round last year, led by Khosla Ventures with participation from Threshold Ventures, Inovia Capital, Bling Capital, Moxxie Ventures, Path Ventures, and former Shopify CTO Jean-Michel Lemieux. The round valued Spellbook at US$350 million. Thomson Reuters Ventures also invests in the company.

