Draft at the speed you talk.
A demand letter, a memo to file, a long client email — the kind of writing a practice runs on, dictated and landing clean at your cursor. Names and legal terms come out spelled right, punctuation in place, and your audio is never used to train a model. Phrasora was built by a practising lawyer who got tired of typing.
Free for 2,000 words a week, no card. Mac, Windows, iPhone, Android, and the web.
It learns your file, not just English.
A general speech model has never heard your client’s surname, opposing counsel’s firm, or the statute you cite three times a day. Phrasora gives the cloud transcription a short, focused hint from your own dictionary — so the terms you actually say come back the way you spell them. The hint is evidence-gated: a term rides along only when there’s a real sign you spoke it, so it never forces a word into your text.
Correct a name once and it’s remembered across every device, and every learned term is announced with time to undo. For an unusual spelling, say the word and then spell it — the letters always win over what was heard.
A word you actually said stays exactly as you said it — it won’t “correct” a name you got right.
please find enclosed the executed transfer for sandu, S-A-N-D-H-U, closing on the fifteenth
PhrasoraPlease find enclosed the executed transfer for Sandhu, closing on the fifteenth.
Formatted for the document at hand.
Cleanup removes the “um”s and false starts, then shapes the text for where it’s going. A piece of correspondence comes out as prose, sign-off and all; a memo with enumerated points comes out structured. You choose the level, and the meaning is never rewritten.
Long letters hold together too — multi-paragraph dictation is cleaned in pieces and stitched back, so a full page of text arrives coherent from greeting to close.
A quick note to file — your words, lightly tidied, punctuation in place.
A letter to a client or counsel — grammar and flow smoothed, always prose, never a list.
A memo of numbered points — proactive headings and bullets when you’re enumerating.
It listens only while you hold the key.
Client work demands discretion, so Phrasora is deliberately narrow. There’s no screen scraping and no keystroke logging — the only thing it reads is the field you’re dictating into. The audio we send for transcription is used for that one dictation and then discarded; separately, so you can replay your work, your most recent recordings — up to the last ten — are saved to a private, per-account folder and older ones delete automatically. Your audio is never used to train a model or build a voice profile.
Your dictionary and history belong to your account, and deleting your account removes everything in one step. We count words to enforce the free tier — counts, never the content of what you dictate.
Records only while the trigger is held.
Only your last ten recordings kept; never used to train a model.
No screen scraping, no keystroke logging.
Delete your account and data in one step.
Measured, not marketed.
Word accuracy on 73 real human-speech recordings.
Median from key release to text at your cursor.
Median word error rate on that same set, before cleanup.
Native clients — Mac, Windows, iPhone, Android.
Latency and accuracy measured on the production pipeline, not a benchmark rig. Methodology in the engineering reports.
The questions lawyers ask first.
Will it get client names and legal terms right?
Yes — and it improves with use. When a name or term you use lives in your dictionary, Phrasora nudges the transcription toward it, but only when there's real evidence you actually said it, so it never forces a word you didn't say. Fix a spelling once and that correction follows you across every device. For an unusual name, say it and then spell it — "Sandu, S-A-N-D-H-U" — and the text reads "Sandhu", spelled your way.
Is dictating client matters private?
Phrasora records only while you hold the key. The audio we send for transcription is used for that one dictation and then discarded; separately, so you can replay your work, your most recent recordings — up to the last ten — are saved to a private, per-account folder and sync across your devices, with older ones deleted automatically and any deletable yourself. There's no voice profile, no screen capture, and no keystroke logging, and your audio is never used to train a model. It reads only the field you're dictating into, never a password or secure field. Deleting your account removes your dictionary, history, and recordings in one step.
Can I dictate a long letter or memo without it falling apart?
Yes. Long dictation is cleaned in pieces and stitched back together, so a multi-paragraph letter holds its structure end to end. Choose Polished for prose correspondence or Structured when you're laying out numbered points in a memo — your words, formatted for the document, never rewritten in meaning.
Does it work in my practice software and email?
Phrasora types into whatever app is in front of you — your word processor, your email client, your practice-management system, a web form. On Mac and Windows it pastes clean text at your cursor in any application; on iPhone and Android it works as a keyboard and a floating button. One account, every device.
Put a draft on the page.
Free for 2,000 words a week, no card required. Dictate your next letter or memo and see the names land right and the page hold together — then judge it on your own files.