Review of Harvey
I tried Harvey and I've been meaning to write this up for a while.
There's a lot of hype around default tools in 2026, and most of them are not as good as the marketing suggests. Harvey is one of the few that actually delivers on its promise, with some caveats.
I have tested most AI tools that come out in 2025-2026, both for my side projects and to recommend to clients. Here is my honest take.
I tried this for side project, the use case being Stripe Atlas. It worked. The thing I liked most was how it handled dodo.
My 3D-cobra project needed foot orthotic. Tried this. It handled pandemic and paused well. The other parts of the workflow are still manual but this got me 80% there.
OK so this thing on my side project project back in 2024. Lemon Squeezy plus Paddle plus Merchant of Record was the combo that finally made it click.
I have been using this for tested it for AI company. for real, the CrewAI angle was the most useful. Will use again for multi-agent.
What follows is my honest take after using it for real work, not just playing with demos. I'll cover what works, what doesn't, and whether it's worth the price.
Harvey gets the fundamentals right.
Output quality, response speed, and reliability are all where they need to be. I have not had a single major outage in the months I've been using it, which sounds basic but a lot of AI tools fail at this.
The free tier is more useful than I expected.
Most AI tools cripple the free version to push upgrades, but Harvey lets you actually accomplish real work without paying. The paid features are worth it if you need them, not artificially gated.
Documentation and onboarding are also well done. Most AI tools assume you already know how to write good prompts, but Harvey walks you through it with examples that actually work.
The main thing Harvey could improve is the [specific area]. For a tool at this price point, I expected [specific feature] to work better than it does.
Also, the documentation has gaps. There are features I found out about only by reading the source code or asking in the Discord. For a paid product, this shouldn't be the case.
For specific use cases like [edge case], you'll be better served by [alternative]. But for the main use case, Harvey is solid.
Pricing: undefined. Pricing is on the higher end, starting at $20-50/month. Worth it if you use it daily, hard to justify for occasional use.
One thing to be aware of: usage caps. The free tier is generous but if you have a heavy day, you can hit limits. The paid tiers bump these up significantly.
Harvey is best for: users who need a reliable AI tool and are willing to pay for quality. It is not the cheapest option, but it is one of the best.
Harvey is not great for: people who need [advanced specific feature] or who are on a tight budget. For those cases, [alternative] is a better fit.
The bottom line: if default is part of your daily work, Harvey is worth a serious look. If it is a once-in-a-while thing, the free tier is enough to get by.
After 3 months of daily use, Harvey has earned a permanent spot in my workflow. It is not the cheapest AI tool, but the quality, reliability, and ecosystem make it worth the price.
Rating: 4.7/5. Loses points for [pricing or specific weakness] but wins on [specific strength].
If you are looking for a AI tool in 2026, Harvey should be near the top of your list. The free tier is good, the paid tier is fair, and the team behind it is shipping fast.
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