Free for every
law student
in India.
A junior should not be priced out of the corpus they will spend the next forty years working with. Verify your enrolment with a .ac.in or NLU email; the full workbench is yours, on us, for the duration of your degree.
The firm tier. Yours, on us.
The same workbench Tier-1 partners ship matters with. Not a sandbox. Not a freemium. The whole thing — corpus, citation grounding, vernacular, court formats — for the duration of your degree.
Three steps. One semester at a time.
We verify enrolment because the offer is for current students — but we keep it light. No proctored exam, no LinkedIn dance. School email, student ID, in your account.
Beyond access. Investment.
Free access is the floor — not the ceiling. Each year we back the students drafting tomorrow's precedent with grants, fellowships and direct routes into chambers.
The Scholar Programme runs in three tracks: Moot Court for the teams arguing at Jessup, Vis, FDI and the domestic NLU circuit; Clinic for legal-aid work at recognised university clinics; and Fellowship for students with an offer letter from one of our 96 partner chambers.
Twenty-four schools today. Every recognised law school by Q4.
We started with the NLU consortium and the major law faculties. If your school isn't on the list yet — verify with a registrar email and we'll onboard it the same week.
The first cohort. Their words.
My Marathi causelist for the moot was three weeks of work before Gotham — now it is one afternoon. The judges noticed the citation density. We made it to quarter-finals.
I came to law school because of legal aid, and ended up doing six months of contract review because I thought that's how careers start. Gotham let me actually do clinic work again.
The Hindi → English drafting for a writ petition we filed pro-bono — the chambers partner said it read better than the work he was paid for. I'm 22.
My professors are still teaching from coursebooks. Gotham is teaching me to read Supreme Court orders the way the partners I want to work for actually read them.