Original research · 2026-07 edition

AI SEO Statistics: Attorney (2026-07 edition)

15 questions · 45 AI responses · 3 models · measured 2026-07-04

The question bank

The questions we tested — sampled from real buyer journeys in attorney.

Each model answered every question once, same wording, same day. These are the prompts behind every percentage on this page.

I just got served papers for a credit card debt, what are my first steps and do I need to respond by a certain date?
Can I handle a simple uncontested divorce myself using online forms or do I really need to hire a lawyer?
What is the typical hourly rate for a family law attorney in a mid-sized city right now?
What specific questions should I ask during a free consultation to see if a personal injury lawyer is actually a good fit?
Should I hire a big law firm or a solo practitioner for a small business contract dispute?
I was arrested for a DUI last night and have a court date tomorrow, how do I find a lawyer who can represent me on such short notice?
What are some warning signs that a criminal defense attorney isn't actually looking out for my best interests or is just trying to settle quickly?
How do I find a real estate lawyer who specifically specializes in zoning laws for residential property additions in my county?
Show all 15 questions
How does a contingency fee work for a medical malpractice suit and what is the standard percentage they usually take from a settlement?
My landlord is trying to evict me because of a pet that's a registered ESA, what specific type of attorney do I need to call?
How much weight should I give to online reviews for lawyers when most of the feedback seems either extremely angry or overly polished?
My father passed away without a will, is it possible to manage the probate process on my own if the estate is relatively small?
I'm starting a tech startup with two partners, what legal documents do we absolutely need an attorney to draft versus using a template?
I think I was wrongfully terminated for reporting harassment, what evidence should I gather before my initial meeting with an employment lawyer?
What's the difference between a flat fee and a retainer, and which one is generally better for a Chapter 7 bankruptcy case?

Model by model

26-point average divergence: which AI you ask changes the answer.

The divergence index is the average gap between the most and least likely model per behavior. Higher = the models disagree more about attorney buyers.

Behavior rates across 15 attorney buyer questions, 2026-07 edition. Last column: average across models.
ChatGPTClaudeGeminiConsensus
Recommends hiring a professional87%87%40%40%
Suggests DIY first27%27%33%93%
Names specific providers7%7%13%80%
Gives price or cost info13%27%20%67%
Tells to check reviews27%0%7%73%
Tells to verify credentials20%0%7%80%
Mentions case studies / portfolio27%0%7%73%
Mentions local proximity47%33%13%53%
Gives selection criteria53%53%33%27%
Warns about red flags33%0%20%67%
Asks a clarifying question60%53%0%13%
Recommends multiple quotes33%13%0%67%

By model

How each assistant handled Attorney questions.

Reading the 45 answers model by model shows how differently the three assistants treat the same attorney questions. On the most consequential behavior — whether to send the buyer to a professional at all — the rate ranged from 86.7% (ChatGPT) down to 40% (Gemini), a 47-point gap on an identical question set.

Across the 15 attorney answers it produced, ChatGPT recommended hiring a professional in 86.7% of them and suggested a DIY approach first 26.7% of the time. It named a specific provider in 6.7% of answers (about 0.3 distinct providers per answer) and included price or cost information 13.3% of the time. ChatGPT asked a clarifying question before answering in 60% of cases, warned about red flags or scams in 33.3%, and told the buyer to verify credentials in 20%, averaging 549 words per answer. On the remaining cues it told the buyer to check reviews in 26.7%, pointed to case studies or a portfolio in 26.7%, and framed the choice around local proximity in 46.7%; a selection-criteria checklist appeared in 53.3% of its answers and a recommendation to gather multiple quotes in 33.3%.

Across the 15 attorney answers it produced, Claude recommended hiring a professional in 86.7% of them and suggested a DIY approach first 26.7% of the time. It named a specific provider in 6.7% of answers (about 0.1 distinct providers per answer) and included price or cost information 26.7% of the time. Claude asked a clarifying question before answering in 53.3% of cases, warned about red flags or scams in 0%, and told the buyer to verify credentials in 0%, averaging 331 words per answer. On the remaining cues it told the buyer to check reviews in 0%, pointed to case studies or a portfolio in 0%, and framed the choice around local proximity in 33.3%; a selection-criteria checklist appeared in 53.3% of its answers and a recommendation to gather multiple quotes in 13.3%.

Across the 15 attorney answers it produced, Gemini recommended hiring a professional in 40% of them and suggested a DIY approach first 33.3% of the time. It named a specific provider in 13.3% of answers (about 0.4 distinct providers per answer) and included price or cost information 20% of the time. Gemini asked a clarifying question before answering in 0% of cases, warned about red flags or scams in 20%, and told the buyer to verify credentials in 6.7%, averaging 254 words per answer. On the remaining cues it told the buyer to check reviews in 6.7%, pointed to case studies or a portfolio in 6.7%, and framed the choice around local proximity in 13.3%; a selection-criteria checklist appeared in 33.3% of its answers and a recommendation to gather multiple quotes in 0%.

Taken together, ChatGPT is the assistant most likely to route an attorney buyer to a professional (86.7%) and Gemini the least (40%). ChatGPT produced the longest answers, at 549 words on average. Specific providers were named most often by Gemini (13.3%) — even there, roughly one answer in 8 carried a name.

Where they disagree

The behaviors where the choice of model changes the answer.

The divergence index for this study is 25.9 points — the average distance between the most and least likely model across the coded behaviors. The gaps below are where which assistant an attorney buyer happens to ask matters most:

  • Asks a clarifying question: from 0% (Gemini) to 60% (ChatGPT) — a 60-point spread.
  • Recommends hiring a professional: from 40% (Gemini) to 86.7% (ChatGPT) — a 47-point spread.
  • Mentions local proximity: from 13.3% (Gemini) to 46.7% (ChatGPT) — a 33-point spread.
  • Warns about red flags or scams: from 0% (Claude) to 33.3% (ChatGPT) — a 33-point spread.
  • Recommends multiple quotes: from 0% (Gemini) to 33.3% (ChatGPT) — a 33-point spread.

The widest single gap — asks a clarifying question, 60 points — means an attorney buyer can receive materially different guidance on the same question depending only on which assistant they happen to open, so any visibility strategy built on a single model's behavior describes only part of the attorney market.

Where they agree

The points of near-consensus in Attorney.

On other behaviors the three models move almost in lockstep — the points of near-consensus for attorney, where all three landed within a few points of each other:

  • Suggests a DIY approach first: 26.7%–33.3% across all three (a 7-point spread).
  • Names a specific provider: 6.7%–13.3% across all three (a 7-point spread).
  • Gives price or cost information: 13.3%–26.7% across all three (a 13-point spread).
  • Tells the buyer to verify credentials: 0%–20% across all three (a 20-point spread).

Measured question by question, the three assistants coded a response the same way most consistently on "suggests a DIY approach first" (identical coding in 93.3% of questions) and least consistently on "asks a clarifying question" (13.3%).

Every behavior, measured

All twelve coded behaviors for Attorney, averaged across the three models.

The behaviors AI models reproduce most often for attorney are recommends hiring a professional (71.1% on average), gives selection criteria (46.6%) and asks a clarifying question (37.8%); the rarest are tells the buyer to verify credentials (8.9%), names a specific provider (8.9%) and mentions case studies or portfolio (11.1%). Each figure below is the share of a model's 15 answers in which the behavior appeared at least once, averaged across the 3 models with the full per-model range in parentheses:

  • Recommends hiring a professional: 71.1% on average (ChatGPT 86.7%, Claude 86.7%, Gemini 40%) — a 47-point spread.
  • Gives selection criteria: 46.6% on average (ChatGPT 53.3%, Claude 53.3%, Gemini 33.3%) — a 20-point spread.
  • Asks a clarifying question: 37.8% on average (ChatGPT 60%, Claude 53.3%, Gemini 0%) — a 60-point spread.
  • Mentions local proximity: 31.1% on average (ChatGPT 46.7%, Claude 33.3%, Gemini 13.3%) — a 33-point spread.
  • Suggests a DIY approach first: 28.9% on average (ChatGPT 26.7%, Claude 26.7%, Gemini 33.3%) — a 7-point spread.
  • Gives price or cost information: 20% on average (ChatGPT 13.3%, Claude 26.7%, Gemini 20%) — a 13-point spread.
  • Warns about red flags or scams: 17.8% on average (ChatGPT 33.3%, Claude 0%, Gemini 20%) — a 33-point spread.
  • Recommends multiple quotes: 15.5% on average (ChatGPT 33.3%, Claude 13.3%, Gemini 0%) — a 33-point spread.
  • Tells the buyer to check reviews: 11.1% on average (ChatGPT 26.7%, Claude 0%, Gemini 6.7%) — a 27-point spread.
  • Mentions case studies or portfolio: 11.1% on average (ChatGPT 26.7%, Claude 0%, Gemini 6.7%) — a 27-point spread.
  • Names a specific provider: 8.9% on average (ChatGPT 6.7%, Claude 6.7%, Gemini 13.3%) — a 7-point spread.
  • Tells the buyer to verify credentials: 8.9% on average (ChatGPT 20%, Claude 0%, Gemini 6.7%) — a 20-point spread.

Trust signals

How well the models protect the attorney buyer.

Beyond whether to hire, the rubric codes how carefully each assistant protects the attorney buyer once a decision is made. Telling the buyer to check reviews or ratings appeared in 11.1% of answers on average. Verifying credentials or certifications appeared in 8.9%. Warning about red flags or scams appeared in 17.8%.

On structuring the decision, a selection-criteria checklist showed up in 46.6% of answers on average and a recommendation to gather multiple quotes in 15.5%. The single least-reproduced protective signal for attorney is "tells the buyer to verify credentials" at 8.9% on average — the clearest opening for content that supplies it, since the models are not yet reliably surfacing that guidance on their own.

Referral behavior

Do AI models name Attorney providers?

For service providers the decisive question is whether these systems name anyone at all. Across 45 attorney answers, a specific provider was named in 8.9% of responses on average — roughly 0.3 distinct providers per answer. In practice the assistants behave far more as an explanatory layer than as a referral engine for attorney: visibility comes from being the reasoning a model reproduces, not from being the named recommendation.

The question set

What these 15 Attorney questions cover.

The 15 questions behind every percentage on this page were drawn from real attorney (legal services; buyer hiring decisions for this specific service) buyer journeys. Each was put to all 3 models once, with identical wording, so the rates above describe how the assistants handled this exact attorney question set — not a general prior or a hand-picked subset. The full list is shown earlier on this page; the coded percentages are what those specific questions produced.

How to read this

A note on the numbers.

A percentage here is the share of a model's 15 answers in which the behavior appeared at least once — not a confidence score. Because each model answered every question exactly once on 2026-07-04, the figures describe this specific attorney question set and snapshot rather than a general prior. The full protocol and coding rubric are documented in the study methodology.

Methodology

A controlled snapshot, documented end to end.

15 standardized buyer questions per industry, one response per model per question (ChatGPT (gpt-5-mini), Claude (claude-sonnet-5), Gemini (gemini-3-flash-preview)), collected 2026-07-04, coded against a fixed 12-behavior rubric with human QA. AI outputs vary with model version, location and time — figures describe this sample and window, and are refreshed each edition. Read the full methodology →