RegScope monitors every federal, state, and local regulatory change, then tells your team exactly what it means and what to do about it. In plain English. Before the fine hits.
SEC climate rules. State privacy laws. OSHA updates. International sanctions. New rules land every week across dozens of agencies. Nobody can track them all manually.
By the time your team discovers a regulatory change, you're already out of compliance. The scramble starts. The lawyers bill. Or worse, the fine arrives.
Thomson Reuters and Wolters Kluwer sell $50K+/year contracts with months-long implementations. Built for Fortune 500. Not for the 200,000+ mid-market companies that need this just as badly.
RegScope continuously scans the Federal Register, state legislative portals, agency bulletins, court filings, and industry publications. Every relevant source. Every jurisdiction.
AI reads the dense legal text and converts it into clear, plain-English summaries. No legalese. No 40-page PDFs. Just what changed and why it matters to your specific industry.
Every change gets an impact score based on your company's operations, location, and industry. High-impact changes surface immediately. Low-risk updates stay in the feed.
Get specific action items: what to change, who's responsible, and when it takes effect. Delivered via email, Slack, or your dashboard. Before the deadline, not after the fine.
Track workplace safety rules, environmental regulations, and supply chain compliance across every facility and jurisdiction.
Stay ahead of patient privacy requirements, state licensing changes, and billing code updates before they impact operations.
Navigate the maze of state money transmitter laws, consumer protection updates, and anti-money laundering requirements.
Monitor local permitting changes, labor law updates, and safety requirements across every jobsite and municipality.
Every day without regulatory monitoring is another day you're exposed. RegScope gives mid-market companies the same intelligence that Fortune 500 firms pay six figures for, at a fraction of the cost. The question isn't whether you need this. It's how long you can afford to go without it.