Paste the agreement.
Copy the full text of the MSA, NDA, lease, SOW, or vendor terms straight into ContractLens. No upload, no account, no formatting to clean up first.

Contract intelligence
Paste an agreement — MSA, NDA, lease, SOW, vendor terms. ContractLens pulls the parties, key dates, obligations, and payment terms, then flags the auto-renew traps, missing liability caps, and one-sided clauses a careful reviewer would catch. The first read on every contract, before it costs you.
Nothing stored · Analyzed in the moment · Built on Astra AI
The clause you skim is the one that bites.
A 90-day renewal window. A liability cap that isn't there. A one-sided indemnity buried on page nine. None of them announce themselves — they just sit and wait.
ContractLens surfaces these patterns from the text you paste. It is a review aid, not legal advice — always confirm against the source document.
Try it now
No upload, no account, no waiting on outside counsel for the first pass. Drop in the full text and ContractLens returns the parties, dates, obligations, key clauses, and the risk flags worth pushing back on.
Contract text is analyzed in the moment and not stored. ContractLens is a review aid — verify every term against the source document.
How it works
Copy the full text of the MSA, NDA, lease, SOW, or vendor terms straight into ContractLens. No upload, no account, no formatting to clean up first.
It works through the document the way a careful reviewer would — separating parties from dates, obligations from boilerplate, and the terms that matter from the ones that don't.
A clean breakdown of parties, key dates, obligations, payment, and clauses — with the risk flags called out plainly, so you know what to push back on before you sign.
What it reads
ContractLens doesn't summarize and stop. It extracts the structure of the agreement into the fields a reviewer actually checks, then tells you where the risk lives.
The named parties, the effective date, the term length, and every renewal, notice, and milestone date — lifted out so the deadline that quietly locks you in never slips past.
Whether it renews on its own, for how long, and exactly how much notice you need to get out — the single most expensive thing buyers miss in a vendor agreement.
Is there a cap on liability — and is it mutual? Who indemnifies whom, and how broadly? The clauses that decide what a dispute actually costs you.
Fees, payment timing, late-fee and escalation terms, and the conditions under which either side can walk away — or can't.
Confidentiality, IP ownership, non-compete, governing law, assignment — surfaced and summarized so the standard-looking sections don't hide a non-standard term.
The most valuable output: specific, practical flags — unlimited liability, one-sided indemnity, vague scope, an auto-renew trap, a missing cap — each in plain English.
Who uses it
ContractLens isn't a replacement for counsel — it's the fast, structured first pass that tells you where to spend their hours, and yours.
You're closing deals, not reading SaaS agreements all day. Paste the vendor's terms and catch the auto-renewal, the price-escalation clause, and the liability you'd be taking on — before it becomes next year's surprise invoice.
When dozens of vendor agreements land at once, ContractLens gives you a consistent first read on every one — flagging the non-standard terms so your team escalates the contracts that actually need a human, not all of them.
Pull the renewal window, the notice deadline, and the payment terms out of every active agreement, so the date that auto-renews a contract for another year lands on your calendar instead of in your lap.
Hand counsel a clean extraction — parties, dates, clauses, and flagged risks — so the billable hours go to judgment and negotiation, not to typing out what the document already says.
A real read
A live ContractLens read of a standard Master Services Agreement. The structure is pulled cleanly — and the things you'd want to push back on are called out, not buried.
Why ContractLens
ContractLens runs on MIND, Astra AI's knowledge-graph platform — the same engine behind our products that reason over dense, real-world documents. It reads contracts the way a careful analyst does: structure first, then risk. And it does it without holding onto your words.
Questions
No. ContractLens is a review aid — a fast, structured first read that tells you what's in an agreement and where the risk lives. It does not provide legal advice and does not replace a qualified attorney. Use it to focus a human's time, not to skip it.
No. The text you paste is sent to the analysis model to produce your review and is not saved to a database afterward. ContractLens is designed to read in the moment and let go — treat it like a careful read, not a filing cabinet.
Any text-based agreement: master services agreements, NDAs, commercial leases, statements of work, vendor and SaaS terms, and similar. The more complete the text you paste, the better the read.
It's built specifically not to. ContractLens reports only what appears in the text — parties, dates, clauses, and risks that are actually present. If something isn't in the document, it's left blank rather than invented.
The flags are practical and specific — auto-renew traps, missing liability caps, one-sided indemnity, vague scope. They're a strong first signal of what to scrutinize, but they are not a legal opinion. Always confirm each flag against the source clause and, where it matters, with counsel.
Yes. Every result includes a one-tap copy of the full structured review as JSON, so you can paste it into your notes, a ticket, or a brief for whoever signs off.
Paste your next agreement and get the structured review — parties, dates, obligations, and the risks worth pushing back on — before you sign.