# CMS vs research database — what Indian law firms actually need in 2026
_Published 2026-05-08T09:00:00.000Z · Updated 2026-05-11T15:38:53.291Z · By Aniruddh Atrey_
Canonical: https://www.courtnetra.com/blog/cms-vs-research-database-india
Category: Practice management
Tags: CMS, research database, Manupatra, SCC Online, CourtNetra, legal tech
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> A 2026 working comparison of case-management systems (CMS) and legal-research databases — what each covers, where they overlap, and how Indian law firms should configure their tooling for the best return.
![A wide office workspace — where firms decide their CMS-versus-research stack](https://images.unsplash.com/photo-1542744095-291d1f67b221?w=1600&h=900&q=80&auto=format&fit=crop)

A common question from Indian law-firm partners in 2026: do we need a CMS, a research database, or both? The marketing material for both categories overlaps, the price tags are real, and most firms feel pressure to subscribe to multiple tools. This post is the working clarification — what each category actually does, where they overlap, where they don&#39;t, and the configuration decisions an Indian firm should make.

## What a CMS is — and is not

A Case Management System (CMS) is operational infrastructure for the working life of a matter. The core capabilities:

- **Matter records** — file numbers, parties, court, judge, hearing dates, drafts, attached documents

- **Calendaring** — cause-list-driven hearing reminders, conflict detection

- **Drafting** — templates for common pleadings (bail, quashing, ITAT Form 36, GST APL-01, NCLT Section 7/9), pre-filled from matter fields

- **Document management** — versioned storage of pleadings, orders, evidence, communications

- **Time and billing** — time entries, invoice generation, client statements

- **Client portal** — matter status, document upload, invoice payment

- **Team coordination** — junior-senior assignments, junior associate task lists, partner review queues

A CMS is _not_ a research tool. It does not, in its core form, provide judgment search, statute commentary, or case-law analysis. Those are research-database functions.

Examples of Indian CMS tools in 2026: CourtNetra, Lawyer Pro, MikeLegal, LegalDesk, PracticeLeague.

## What a research database is — and is not

A research database is a knowledge resource for the substantive law underlying a matter. The core capabilities:

- **Judgment search** — full-text search across SC, HC, tribunal, and District Court judgments

- **Statute search** — text and amendment history of bare acts

- **Commentaries** — editorial analysis of statutes, leading cases, doctrine

- **Citation networks** — which cases cite which other cases (forward and reverse citation)

- **Head-notes** — editorial summaries of judgments

- **Boolean / keyword search** — advanced query support

- **Saved searches and alerts** — get notified when a new judgment matches a saved query

A research database is _not_ a matter-management tool. It does not track your firm&#39;s matters, file numbers, drafts, or billing. Those are CMS functions.

Examples of Indian research databases in 2026: Manupatra, SCC Online, LegitQuest, CaseMine, Indian Kanoon.

## Where they overlap

The boundaries have softened in 2026:

**CMS tools with AI research.** CourtNetra includes NyayaLens AI for precedent search within the CMS. Lawyer Pro has an AI research module. These are not full research databases — they&#39;re built for in-context lookup during drafting — but they cover the routine "find me a case on this point" need.

**Research databases with practice tools.** Manupatra and SCC Online have offered limited matter-tracking add-ons. These are typically lightweight and not the primary use case; firms that adopted them tend to outgrow them.

**AI-anchored discovery.** AI-driven precedent discovery (NyayaLens AI; ChatGPT Plus with legal training; Bard / Gemini on Indian legal queries) blurs the line further. AI tools are not authoritative — but for first-pass research they are increasingly useful.

The practical outcome: most firms run both a CMS and a research database, with the CMS&#39;s AI module supplementing (not replacing) the research database for in-context lookup.

## When you need a CMS

A CMS becomes essential when:

- The firm has > 30 active matters

- Multiple advocates work across overlapping matters (junior-senior coordination needed)

- Hearing dates need centralised tracking (multiple courts, multiple cities)

- Drafts need versioning and approval workflows

- Time-records and invoices need to be generated from matter activity

- Clients want a portal to track their matter status

Below 30 matters, spreadsheets and shared folders suffice. Above 30, the friction of manual coordination becomes structural.

## When you need a research database

A research database becomes essential when:

- The firm handles substantive legal research as a core deliverable (opinions, advisories, complex litigation)

- Time-bound research is frequent (deadline-driven litigation requiring full case-law surveys)

- Multiple advocates need parallel research access

- Citation network analysis is part of the working method

- Specialised practice areas with deep doctrinal questions (constitutional, tax, IBC, competition law)

For a routine criminal-defence practice handling bail and quashing matters, the research need is more episodic — case search via Indian Kanoon plus a CMS-anchored AI tool may be sufficient. For an arbitration or tax practice running complex litigation, a premium research database is essential.

## Cost comparison

**CMS pricing in 2026:**

- Solo: ₹500-₹1,500 / month (₹6,000-₹18,000 / year)

- Small firm (3-5 users): ₹2,500-₹8,000 / month (₹30,000-₹96,000 / year)

- Mid firm (10-20 users): ₹15,000-₹60,000 / month (₹1.8L-₹7.2L / year)

**Research database pricing in 2026:**

- Manupatra Single User: ₹40,000-₹60,000 / year

- SCC Online Single User: ₹35,000-₹55,000 / year

- Manupatra / SCC Online firm-wide (15-25 users): ₹4L-₹9L / year

- LegitQuest / CaseMine Single User: ₹15,000-₹30,000 / year

- Indian Kanoon: free

For a 5-advocate firm running both CMS and one premium research database, total annual tooling cost is typically ₹2.5L-₹4L. Add an AI research supplement (~₹50,000-₹1L) and the total is ₹3L-₹5L per year. This is a working benchmark for Indian small-firm tooling.

## Configuration decisions

The standard Indian-firm configuration patterns in 2026:

**Pattern 1: CMS + Premium Research + Free Supplement**

- CourtNetra or Lawyer Pro as CMS

- Manupatra OR SCC Online (one premium subscription, firm-wide)

- Indian Kanoon for older / regional / tribunal-specific case search

- Total: ₹2L-₹4L / year for 3-5 users

**Pattern 2: CMS with AI + Free Research**

- CourtNetra Pro with NyayaLens AI as primary CMS + research

- Indian Kanoon for verification and supplementary research

- Total: ₹50,000-₹1L / year for 3-5 users

**Pattern 3: Premium Research + Lightweight CMS**

- Manupatra OR SCC Online as primary research

- Spreadsheet / Notion / lightweight CMS for matter tracking

- Total: ₹2L-₹3L / year for 3-5 users

Pattern 1 is the most common. Pattern 2 is increasingly chosen by smaller / cost-conscious firms in 2026 as AI research has matured. Pattern 3 is common for firms with research-heavy practices and minimal litigation operations.

## What changes with AI research

AI tools have meaningfully changed the cost-benefit math:

- A junior advocate can ask "find me cases on quashing of FIR for matrimonial dispute" and get 5-10 relevant Supreme Court / HC cases in seconds

- AI tools surface citations in plain English with paragraph-level pointers

- AI tools cover regional-language judgments better than older databases

- AI tools update faster — recent judgments appear within days

But:

- AI tools occasionally hallucinate citations. Always verify with the underlying judgment.

- Editorial-led databases (Manupatra, SCC Online) provide head-notes and commentaries that AI doesn&#39;t replicate

- For complex doctrinal research, the depth of editorial annotation in premium databases is still ahead

A common 2026 working pattern: AI for first-pass discovery, premium database for verification and depth. Many firms run NyayaLens AI inside CourtNetra alongside Manupatra or SCC Online.

## Migration considerations

If a firm is moving from spreadsheet matter tracking to a CMS:

- Budget 1-2 weeks of data entry per 100 matters

- Document the existing spreadsheet structure first; pick a CMS whose schema mostly matches

- Run parallel for 2-3 months — keep the spreadsheet updated alongside the CMS until the team trusts the new system

- Migrate billing last — invoices and statements are the riskiest area for migration errors

If a firm is changing research databases (e.g., Manupatra to SCC Online):

- Verify coverage of historical cases the firm has cited recently — note any gaps

- Re-test citation alerts that were saved in the old system

- Train the team on the new search syntax (Boolean operators differ between databases)

- Budget 2-4 weeks for the team to feel comfortable with the new tool

## How CourtNetra fits

CourtNetra is positioned as a CMS-first platform with integrated AI research. The platform philosophy:

- **CMS is primary.** Matter tracking, calendaring, drafting, billing, client portal are the core.

- **NyayaLens AI is integrated.** Precedent search happens inside the matter context — the AI knows what statute / section / question is being researched.

- **Indian Kanoon supplements.** For older / regional / tribunal-specific case research, Indian Kanoon links are included.

- **Premium databases are not replaced.** Firms running Manupatra or SCC Online continue to use them; CourtNetra integrates as the CMS layer.

For a firm starting fresh, CourtNetra Pro (with NyayaLens AI) covers most matter management and routine research at a fraction of the cost of premium-database-only configurations.

For a firm already running premium research, CourtNetra adds the operational layer — matter tracking, calendaring, drafting, billing — without forcing a research-database migration.

Our [comparison pages](/compare/manupatra) cover the head-to-head with each major Indian legal-research tool.

## The bottom line

CMS and research database serve different needs. A CMS handles the operational life of a matter; a research database handles substantive legal research. Most Indian firms in 2026 need both — and the configuration choices come down to firm size, practice area, and budget.

For a 5-advocate firm running mixed litigation, the standard configuration is: CMS (CourtNetra or Lawyer Pro) + one premium research database (Manupatra or SCC Online) + free supplements (Indian Kanoon). Total annual cost: ₹2L-₹4L. Working benefit: structured matter operations, professional client experience, and access to verified case-law research at every workstation.

CourtNetra is built for this configuration — operating as the CMS layer with optional integrated AI research. The platform fits alongside any premium research database the firm runs.