The traditional billable hour, which governs roughly 80% of law firm fee arrangements, cannot absorb this efficiency gain without revenue collapse. Firms including Fennemore Law are moving to fixed fees, success-based pricing, subscription models, and value-sharing arrangements. Some are testing senior rates above $3,000 per hour to offset lost volume. The market is fragmenting rapidly, with no consensus on which model will prevail. Regulatory bodies have not yet intervened; adoption remains firm-by-firm.
Attorneys should monitor two developments. First, client-side enforcement: expect more pushback on bills for tasks clients know AI can handle in minutes. Second, internal pressure: firms that don't adopt alternative fee structures risk losing both clients and talent to competitors offering them. The billable hour's dominance is eroding faster than most firms anticipated. Governance frameworks around AI use and profitability are no longer optional.