Independently researched from published sources. Last researched: April 2026. Results vary: this article teaches AI skills, not employment outcomes. See Terms and Privacy.
This article covers a profession with specific obligations in the area named above. It is not a substitute for your licensing, supervision, or professional duties, and nothing here is legal or compliance advice. Keep a human decision-maker on anything those obligations touch, and check your company's AI policy before using any prompt or tool with real work data.
These are six prompts pulled from our independently researched guide for Legal Assistants. Each one was written with specific structure, guardrails, and formatting instructions baked in. That matters because a vague question gets a vague answer. A prompt that tells the model exactly what sections to produce, what tone to use, and what to flag for attorney review gets something you can actually hand off.
The prompts below cover the tasks that eat most of a legal assistant's day: drafting correspondence, cleaning up billing entries, keeping clients informed, organizing deadlines, converting meeting chaos into action items, and summarizing case files. They are not legal advice generators. Every one includes explicit instructions to flag items for attorney review.
To use them: copy the prompt, replace everything in [BRACKETS] with your real details, and paste into ChatGPT or any other AI chat tool. Read the output critically. These give you a strong first draft in seconds, not a finished product.
Rough time entries pile up, and rewriting them into defensible billing descriptions is one of the most tedious parts of the job. This prompt converts shorthand notes into polished narratives that start with active verbs, stay between 15 and 25 words, and avoid vague language like 'various matters.' It also flags entries where the time seems unusually long or short for the task described, which saves you from billing disputes later.
How to use it: Paste your raw time entries where indicated (the format 'call w/ client re: discovery issues 0.5' works fine). Review the output line by line before importing into your billing system.
Drafting letters from scratch takes time, and getting the tone wrong on a demand letter versus a client update can cause real problems. This prompt locks in the format (date, reference line, salutation) and asks you to specify tone upfront, so the output matches the situation. The 500-word cap and the explicit 'do NOT include any legal advice' instruction keep the draft clean for attorney review.
How to use it: Fill in the letter type, recipient details, key points, and the signing attorney's name. Hand the output to the reviewing attorney as a first draft, not a final version.
Clients want to know what is happening with their case, and writing these emails from scratch every time is slow. This prompt forces a useful structure: lead with progress, keep it under 200 words, use plain language, and end with clear next steps. The instruction to frame setbacks as 'here is what we are doing about it' prevents the kind of alarming language that generates panicked client calls.
How to use it: Replace the bracketed fields with your matter details and recent developments. Set action required to 'NONE' if the client does not need to do anything. Always have the attorney review before sending.
Finding these useful? The full guide has 15 of them, plus tool reviews and a 30-day plan. Get it for $29.
Every new file needs a summary, and writing one from scattered documents takes longer than it should. This prompt produces a structured one-page brief with procedural posture, chronological facts, legal issues, and open action items. The [NEEDS INFO] flag it inserts wherever information is missing is genuinely useful because it shows you exactly what gaps to fill before the attorney asks.
How to use it: Paste the case name, number, jurisdiction, and whatever key facts or document excerpts you have. The output is a starting point. Fill in every [NEEDS INFO] flag before attaching it to the file.
Missed deadlines are malpractice exposure. This prompt takes a raw list of dates and builds a structured table with preparation start dates, conflict warnings for deadlines within five business days of each other, and reminder dates at 30, 14, 7, and 2 days out. It also checks for weekends and holidays near deadlines, which is the kind of thing that slips through when you are entering dates manually.
How to use it: Paste your deadlines in any format (the prompt handles informal lists). Copy the output table into your calendar system or case management software, then verify each date against the court's scheduling order.
Meetings generate decisions and tasks, but raw notes rarely capture them in a way anyone can act on. This prompt extracts a summary, an action items table with assignments and priorities, open questions, and documents requested. It flags any task missing a deadline or a responsible person, which means nothing falls through the cracks just because the meeting ran long and people got sloppy.
How to use it: Paste your raw meeting notes or transcript. Review the action items table and fill in every [NEEDS DEADLINE] and [NEEDS ASSIGNMENT] flag before distributing.
The full Legal Assistant guide goes much further: 15 copy-paste prompts, honest reviews of 12 tools with current prices, a dos and don'ts chapter, and a 30-day plan to put it all into practice.
Get the full guide. $29One-time purchase. Instant download. Or see the full AI guide for legal assistants.