Editor’s Note: Software is the segment of the worldwide eDiscovery market compounding fastest through 2030. Reconciled estimates highlight software spending growing from approximately $6.67 billion in 2025 to approximately $10.95 billion in 2030 – a 10.41 percent compound annual rate that exceeds the aggregate market CAGR by nearly three percentage points and the services CAGR by 4.66 percentage points. The pattern is concrete: AI-assisted capabilities embedded in core review, analytics, and processing workflows are reclassifying work that once flowed through services into software-driven channels, while subscription consumption and cloud-first procurement reduce friction across the entire buyer evaluation and deployment cycle.

The 10.41 percent software CAGR is not an abstract growth number. It is the direct result of AI-assisted review, AI-driven analytics, and emerging agentic features being delivered as software features rather than as professional-services engagements. The same review workflow that once generated services revenue at per-document or per-hour rates now generates software revenue at SaaS subscription or AI-inference rates. The work has expanded with data volumes; the channel through which it gets billed has steadily shifted toward software.

For cybersecurity, data privacy, regulatory compliance, and eDiscovery professionals, three observations follow. First, software vendor evaluation criteria now extend into AI governance, model transparency, data residency, and inference cost – dimensions that were peripheral a decade ago and central today. Second, services pricing pressure – particularly in managed review – is structurally tied to software’s outperformance, not cyclically driven, and will persist through 2030 and beyond. Third, the procurement and vendor relationship landscape itself is being remade as software absorbs work that human-driven services historically performed. Subsequent Market Intelligence analyses will examine the deployment, cloud composition, and segment-specific dynamics underneath the headline software CAGR, culminating in the consolidated 2025–2030 eDiscovery Marketplace Mashup.


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Market Intelligence: The eDiscovery software market from 2025 to 2030

Reconciled estimates highlight worldwide software spending of $6.67 billion in 2025, climbing to $10.95 billion in 2030 – a 10.41 percent CAGR driven by AI-assisted capabilities, subscription consumption, and the steady reclassification of work from services into software

ComplexDiscovery Staff

Software is the segment of the worldwide eDiscovery market compounding fastest. Reconciled estimates place worldwide software spending at approximately $6.67 billion in 2025, climbing to approximately $10.95 billion in 2030 – a five-year increase of roughly 64 percent and a reconciled compound annual growth rate of 10.41 percent. The software CAGR exceeds the aggregate market CAGR by nearly three percentage points a year, and the services CAGR by 4.66 percentage points. The pattern is steady, the cause is concrete, and the gap is widening. Software is becoming a different category than it was even five years ago, and AI is the reason.

The 2025 software baseline

In 2025, reconciled estimates place worldwide eDiscovery software spending at approximately $6.67 billion – approximately 34 percent of the aggregate market. The segment is dominated by review, processing, and analytics platforms, with collection software and adjacent capabilities growing in importance. Cloud delivery is the default for new deployments; on-premise software persists primarily where security, sovereignty, or contractual constraints require it. The 2025 software baseline reflects approximately 13 years of compounding from a $1.42 billion starting point in 2012 – close to a fivefold expansion in absolute terms, against an aggregate market that expanded roughly fourfold over the same span.


Chart: eDiscovery Software Market (2025-2030)

eDiscovery Software Market (2025-2030)

Three concurrent forces driving a 10.41 percent CAGR

Three forces operate concurrently to sustain the software CAGR above the aggregate. The first is AI-assisted capability embedded in core software workflows – predictive coding (now functionally legacy), generative-AI-assisted review (the current decade’s emerging default), AI-driven analytics and early-case-assessment tooling, and the first wave of agentic workflow features that automate sequences of review and processing tasks. The second is the migration of buyers toward subscription consumption, which accelerates reported software revenue as perpetual-license revenue gives way to recurring SaaS billing across the installed base. The third is cloud-first procurement, which has reduced friction between buyer evaluation and software adoption while expanding the surface area where AI capabilities can be delivered without complex on-premise integration.

AI as the central tailwind

Of the three forces, AI is the most consequential through 2030. AI-assisted capabilities are increasingly delivered as features within software platforms rather than as professional-services engagements, reclassifying work that once flowed through services into software channels. The same review workflow that once generated services revenue at a per-document or per-hour rate now generates software revenue at a SaaS subscription or AI-inference rate. The compounding shift is gradual but cumulative: each generation of AI capability embedded in software absorbs another slice of work that previously demanded human attention, billed through services. The 10.41 percent software CAGR through 2030 reflects this channel reallocation as much as it reflects pure growth differences. The 2030 software endpoint of $10.95 billion is, in large measure, an AI endpoint.

Subscription and cloud-first procurement

The two non-AI tailwinds are not incidental. Subscription consumption shifts both vendor revenue recognition and buyer purchasing behavior. Vendors record revenue against recurring SaaS billing rather than upfront perpetual licenses, which smooths reported revenue across multiple years and accelerates reported growth as customers migrate from legacy contracts. Buyers gain pricing flexibility and the ability to scale spend with workload. Cloud-first procurement reduces the time between buyer evaluation and software deployment, thereby accelerating revenue recognition. Together, these two forces would produce a software CAGR meaningfully above services even if AI-driven channel reallocation were not a factor. AI is the dominant force, but it is not the only one.

What software’s outperformance means for vendors and buyers

For software vendors, the reconciled 10.41 percent CAGR continues to favor cloud-native, AI-enabled platforms. AI capability, integration breadth, security posture, and inference economics now sit alongside traditional capability and pricing as procurement evaluation criteria. For service providers, software’s outperformance is the structural driver of parallel pricing pressure within services – particularly in managed review, where AI-assisted review reclassifies labor into software-billed flows. For buyers, software vendor evaluation now extends into AI governance, model transparency, data residency, and inference cost transparency – dimensions that did not exist a decade ago and that are central to procurement diligence today.

What comes next in the Market Intelligence series

Subsequent Market Intelligence analyses zoom further into software through two complementary lenses. The deployment view examines on-premise versus off-premise software, where cloud-first procurement is now functionally complete for new deployments. The cloud composition view examines the SaaS, PaaS, and IaaS subcategories within off-premise software, where SaaS continues to anchor cloud spend, but PaaS and IaaS components are growing faster as AI inference workloads run across platform and infrastructure services. The series will close with the consolidated 2025-2030 eDiscovery Marketplace Mashup as the synthesis point.

The figures presented here are reconciled estimates aligned to a common scope (worldwide eDiscovery software, including SaaS, PaaS, IaaS, and on-premise components), a common geography, and a common timeframe (calendar years 2025 through 2030). They draw on publicly available third-party research, vendor disclosures, and analyst evaluations aggregated within the underlying market model. Forward estimates from past and present industry data sources are included in the model and presented as the current reconciled view. The 2025-2030 eDiscovery Marketplace Mashup is complete in its underlying analysis but remains unpublished in its consolidated form at this time. It will be published as the culmination of the Market Intelligence series, with the full source list, citation guidance, and methodology disclosure included at that time.

If software’s CAGR continues to outpace services by roughly 4.66 percentage points a year, how much of the next decade of eDiscovery work that today appears as services revenue will be running through software billing channels by 2035 – and what does the procurement and vendor relationship landscape look like when AI features steadily absorb the bulk of the work that human-driven services historically performed?

About the eDiscovery Market Size Mashup from ComplexDiscovery OÜ

The eDiscovery Market Size Mashup from ComplexDiscovery OÜ is an annual analytical report that provides a comprehensive overview of eDiscovery market trends, task-based expenditures, and technological advancements. Drawing on data from historical studies, market modeling, and future forecasting, the Mashup offers actionable insights for legal, business, and technology professionals. By examining key factors such as data growth, task allocation, and the impact of emerging technologies, such as generative AI, the Mashup serves as a citable resource for understanding the evolving dynamics of eDiscovery. The 2025-2030 edition of the report is complete in its underlying analysis and will be published in its consolidated form as the culmination of the Market Intelligence series.

News sources

The following list is a directional resource set rather than an exact bibliography. It identifies representative inputs that shape this analysis; the core source listing, which provides a general understanding of data point sources over the lifecycle of the model, will be published with the consolidated 2025-2030 eDiscovery Market Size Mashup at the culmination of the Market Intelligence series.



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