Docketwise is the best AI tool for immigration lawyers in 2026. At $69/month per user, it handles case management, form auto-filling, and client portals — the exact combination immigration practices need without the enterprise bloat. It's built by people who understand USCIS workflows, and it shows.

Immigration law is uniquely suited for AI because it's form-heavy, deadline-driven, and procedurally repetitive. The right tools eliminate the manual work that buries solo and small immigration practices — filling out the same 20-page forms, tracking hundreds of deadlines, and managing client documents across dozens of case types. Here's what actually works.


Docketwise — Best All-in-One Immigration Platform

Docketwise auto-fills USCIS forms using data from your client intake questionnaires — enter information once, and it populates across every form in the case. The case management system tracks deadlines, receipt notices, and case status. Client portals let applicants upload documents and complete questionnaires without back-and-forth emails. At $69/user/month, it's affordable for solo practitioners and scales to mid-size firms. Best for any immigration practice that processes USCIS applications. The limitation: it's focused on affirmative immigration cases — litigation and removal defense features are less developed.

Visalaw.ai — Best for Petition Generation

Visalaw.ai uses AI to draft immigration petitions, support letters, and legal briefs. Feed it case details and it generates a first draft of your H-1B petition, O-1 extraordinary ability letter, or EB-1 support brief. The AI understands USCIS adjudication standards and tailors arguments to specific visa categories. Pricing varies by firm size. Best for firms handling high volumes of employment-based petitions where drafting is the bottleneck. The limitation: every petition still needs attorney review and customization — the AI creates a strong starting point but can't handle nuanced cases without human judgment.

Imagility — Best for Corporate Immigration

Imagility bridges the gap between corporate HR departments and immigration law firms. It manages the corporate immigration workflow — from job posting and LCA filing to petition preparation and compliance tracking. The AI handles prevailing wage analysis, job duty descriptions, and regulatory compliance checks. Pricing is enterprise-focused for corporations and their outside counsel. Best for firms with corporate immigration clients who need a shared platform for case collaboration. The limitation: overkill for consumer immigration practices and solo practitioners.

eImmigration by Cerenade — Best Budget All-in-One

eImmigration offers case management, USCIS form auto-filling, client portals, and document management at $55/user/month — the lowest price point for a comprehensive immigration platform. It covers 100+ USCIS forms and includes built-in time tracking and billing. The platform is straightforward and gets the job done without unnecessary complexity. Best for budget-conscious solo practitioners and small firms that need core functionality without premium pricing. The limitation: fewer AI-powered features than Docketwise, and the interface feels dated compared to newer platforms.

Building Your Immigration Tech Stack

Most immigration practices need just two things: a case management platform (Docketwise or eImmigration) and a general-purpose AI (Claude or ChatGPT) for drafting support letters, RFE responses, and client communications. Add Visalaw.ai if you're processing 20+ employment petitions per month and drafting is your bottleneck. Add Imagility only if corporate immigration is a significant part of your practice. Don't overcomplicate it — immigration law benefits more from good systems than from flashy AI.

The Bottom Line: Docketwise at $69/month gives immigration lawyers the best combination of form automation, case management, and client portals — it's the foundation every immigration practice needs.

AI-Assisted Research. This piece was researched and written with AI assistance, reviewed and edited by Manu Ayala. For deeper takes and the perspective behind the research, follow me on LinkedIn or email me directly.