AI legal intelligence

Ask anything.Understand everything.

A legal intelligence built for Australian family law — purpose-trained to help you understand your situation, with answers you can verify.

What it's like

Like asking a lawyer who already knows your case.

Answers you can cite

Ask in plain English and get answers backed by the Family Law Act and real Australian judgments — with citations you can click through and verify.

It remembers your case

RYTZ keeps the context of your matter across the conversation, so you're not re-explaining your situation every time you ask.

There at 2am

The questions that keep you up don't wait for business hours. Neither does RYTZ — it's available whenever you need it.

Under the hood

Not a generic chatbot.

A general chatbot reasons from the open internet and can invent cases. RYTZ is built differently.

Verified Australian law

Answers are drawn only from a curated corpus of Australian family law — the Family Law Act 1975, real case law and the court's own forms — not the open internet.

A dual knowledge graph

One graph maps how Australian law connects; a second, private one maps your case — so answers are grounded in both the law and your own facts.

Search by meaning

Describe your situation however it comes out. RYTZ finds the relevant authorities by meaning, not keywords, then reasons over them.

Why you can trust it

Accuracy you can verify.

Grounded in verified sources

RYTZ answers only from its verified corpus of Australian law — never the open internet, never invented cases.

Every citation is verifiable

Each answer links back to the real judgment or section, so you can read the source yourself before you rely on it.

Intelligence, not legal advice

RYTZ helps you understand and prepare. It tells you what it knows, what it doesn't, and when to see a lawyer.

Australian-hosted and private

Your conversations and case data sit on Australian servers, encrypted, and are never sold or used to train AI.

Operated under the Australian Privacy Act 1988. RYTZ is legal information, not legal advice.

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