EY Law Study

Reshaping Legal Functions: Insights for Ireland's General Counsel

Irish GCs face unprecedented challenges. Discover how to adapt, innovate, and lead legal functions into the future.


In brief

  • Geopolitical Tensions: 83% of GCs say geopolitical tensions are reshaping their roles, presenting a prime opportunity for legal leadership on emerging risks.
  • AI Disruption: Rapid shifts in AI and automation are a concern for 73%, highlighting the urgency for adaptation in the legal landscape.
  • Regulatory Challenges: 70% view regulatory changes as a significant hurdle, driving the need for innovative tracking solutions beyond manual methods.

As disruption arises from various fronts, Irish legal departments have a unique opportunity to adapt quickly, think strategically, and drive change proactively.

For Irish General Counsel (GCs), the landscape is evolving. With economic fluctuations, rapid technological advancements, and a dynamic regulatory environment, legal departments are facing new challenges and opportunities. While many legal leaders recognise the need for transformation, the 2025 EY Law General Counsel Study indicates there is still significant room for growth in delivering impactful change to stay ahead.

Irish GCs are no longer just guardians of compliance; they’re emerging as drivers of business transformation.

But recognition doesn’t always come with room to move. GCs are balancing soaring expectations with limited bandwidth, navigating greater risk with fewer resources. Many see the opportunity to lead, but carving out the time, space, and mandate to do so is a challenge in itself.

“Ireland’s GCs are no strangers to pressure. But this isn’t about firefighting, it’s about stepping up and reshaping legal into something faster, leaner, and more plugged into the business than ever before.” - Alan Murphy – Head of EY Law Ireland

A photographic portrait of Alan Murphy

Disruption Isn’t Coming. It’s Already Here

Time to Rethink How Legal Works

Risk, Regulation and the Race to Keep Up


Talent and Sourcing: The Pressure is Building

Digitisation: High Ambition, Real Barriers

What Next? Time to Step Up

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Chapter 1

Disruption Isn’t Coming. It’s Already Here

Complexity is rising, and legal teams across Ireland are being hit faster than ever. According to the study, 83% of GCs say geopolitical tension is already affecting their role. That’s closely followed by rapid shifts in AI and automation (73%), and the growing weight of regulatory requirements (70%).

Yet Irish GCs have proven, time and again, that they’re ready to meet the moment. Known both locally and globally for their high standards and openness to innovation, they’ve consistently adapted to changing landscapes.

The current wave of change—GenAI, cyber, data, risk—may be daunting, but it’s also an opportunity to create legal teams that are smarter, better regulated, more agile, and strategically embedded in the business.

At the same time, there’s a paradox at play. 90% of legal departments anticipate a budget increase over the next 12 months but cost reduction is still a priority for 80%.

This involves more than just enhancing productivity while reducing costs. It’s about building legal functions that are flexible, efficient, and ready for whatever’s next.

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Chapter 2

Time to Rethink How Legal Works

Most legal teams are still planning around a 12-month calendar. But today’s challenges don’t stick to a timetable. They hit fast, often without warning.

While the majority of Irish legal departments say they update their strategies each year, fewer than half dig deeper, looking at what’s really driving risk, where money’s being spent, or how to prepare for the unknown.

Given that only 17% of legal teams have conducted a spend management review in the past year and many still rely on traditional metrics, there’s a clear opportunity for GCs to shape the agenda, align more closely with business priorities, and demonstrate greater value.

The intent is there but GCs often face internal barriers to execution. From lack of time to fragmented mandates, it’s not always easy to turn ambition into action.

Still, there’s momentum. Many GCs plan to leverage technology to automate processes and deliver efficiency, with 63% saying they’ll increase their use of automation tools. Legal project management and outsourcing are also increasingly used to manage workload and improve responsiveness.

It’s not just about cutting spend. It’s about getting smarter with how legal delivers, so teams can move faster and make more impact where it counts.

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Chapter 3

Risk, Regulation and the Race to Keep Up

Irish GCs are now at the coalface of business risk—from the legal implications of GenAI to intensifying scrutiny around regulation and cyber threats. GenAI tops the list of GC concerns (43%), followed closely by data privacy and cybersecurity (37%), and compliance with emerging regulation (33%).

Yet many legal functions are still operating without clearly defined value propositions or service delivery models. Escalation paths are vague, roles are fragmented, and regulatory tracking is often manual. It’s a structure that hampers responsiveness, right when agility is needed most.

Managing risk can’t just sit in a policy document. It has to be part of how legal shows up across the business—fast, informed and ready to act.

This is a critical turning point. While 80% of Irish GCs expect to increase investment in risk management and compliance, particularly in relation to technology, cyber and regulatory response, the real opportunity lies in how strategically that investment is used.

The regulatory bar is rising across every sector. But what we’re seeing is a lag between awareness and response. Legal teams need integrated frameworks that bring together governance, risk and compliance—because treating them in silos is no longer sustainable.

Leading legal departments are shifting from compliance-as-usual to proactive oversight, using automation and smarter tools to scan for risk and stay ahead of change. But they’re still in the minority.

 

To keep pace with modern regulation, legal teams need better data, smarter tech, and a more integrated role in strategic decision-making, with a seat alongside the C-suite.

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Chapter 4

Talent and Sourcing: The Pressure is Building

With work getting more complex, finding the right people and partners is harder than ever. Most GCs (77%) say they want to rethink their sourcing strategy—but only 43% have done so recently.

 

Internal resistance, fragmented providers and clunky procurement processes are slowing down change. And the result? Legal teams are operating under significant pressure and working hard to keep pace.

 

On the people side, legal departments are making moves—investing in better knowledge sharing (77%), hybrid working (63%) and more balanced workloads (63%). But there’s still a gap between what firms offer and what legal talent actually values: purpose, growth and flexibility.

It’s not about beanbags or back-to-office mandates. The legal professionals who stay are the ones who feel like they’re learning, growing and making a difference.

Irish GCs know how to build strong teams. But they need support from leadership, sourcing partners, and tech to manage increasing workload and operate with pace and precision.


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Chapter 5

Digitisation: High Ambition, Real Barriers

Digital transformation is high on the agenda for Irish legal departments with 73% identifying legal tech and data strategies as a top priority. But ambition isn’t yet translating into action.

Only 13% of GCs say GenAI is currently a high priority, and actual usage remains limited. Most legal teams are still in test-and-learn mode, with more planning to use GenAI than actively deploying it. For use cases like legal due diligence, uptake is particularly low, just 3% are using it today, even though 73% say they plan to in the next year.

The intent is strong, but GCs are constrained by legacy systems, fragmented data and limited budget, making it difficult to manage increasing workloads or operate at pace and with precision.

Budget is the biggest blocker—named by 67% of GCs. But it’s not just about money. Many legal teams are grappling with fragmented data, disconnected platforms and outdated infrastructure. Nearly half report that their data is disorganised or spread across different systems. Others struggle with limited access to accurate data or poor integration between legal and business technology platforms.

We’ve entered a phase where legal tech is no longer optional for teams seeking greater efficiency without compromising performance, it’s foundational. However, real transformation takes more than just tools. It requires the right kind of data, clear commercial goals and a legal strategy that is scalable in line with the broader business.

These technical challenges are compounded by organisational ones. A third of GCs say change management and adoption are holding them back. Others cite a lack of executive understanding of how legal data adds value, or simply not having the time and skills needed to build a business case for new tech.

GenAI can take legal up a gear but only if it’s done right. That means strong guardrails, clear training and a strategy that ties back to business value.

Still, momentum is building. Many teams are already adopting automation in areas like IP management and legal dashboards. And there’s a growing awareness that success with GenAI depends on human oversight and structured training, with 73% of legal leaders saying both are essential.

Despite these hurdles, the trajectory is clear. Irish GCs aren’t resistant to change, they’re ready for it. What they need now is the time, mandate and support to see it through.


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Chapter 6

What Next? Time to Step Up

Legal’s role is changing, and Irish GCs know it. They’re not just being asked to advise or protect. They’re being asked to drive, shape and lead.

That means making legal leaner, faster and more connected to the business. It means turning risk into foresight, compliance into capability, and strategy into execution.

To do that, legal leaders need to:

  • Rebuild how the function works—with agility, data and resilience built in
  • Put legal at the heart of risk and decision-making
  • Use sourcing to unlock speed, skill and scale
  • Digitise with purpose—and measure what matters
  • Build a culture where legal professionals want to stay, grow and lead

This isn’t just about catching up. It’s about taking the lead. The future won’t wait. And neither should legal.

Conclusion

Irish GCs are at a real turning point. They’ve earned their seat at the table through expertise, judgement and the ability to stay calm under pressure. Now, more than ever, their role is expanding—and rightly so.

But with that comes the hard part: making change happen in teams that are already stretched, dealing with legacy systems, rising expectations and limited time.

The 2025 EY Law General Counsel Study shows that most GCs know what needs to change—and they’re ready to get moving. The challenge now is turning that intent into action.

Irish GCs don’t need convincing—they need the breathing space, backing and tools to make progress stick.

This is the moment to shift from good intentions to real change.

Summary

The future of legal in Ireland depends on GCs stepping up, taking charge, and transforming their departments into agile, effective teams that can tackle whatever comes next. It's about making real changes that drive value and support the broader goals of the organisation. The opportunity is there—it's time to seize it.

Methodology

The quantitative survey in the 2025 study includes responses from 1,000 General Counsel and Chief Legal Officers including 30 Irish respondents across 21 countries.

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