Today, we’re opening the doors to Supio’s new office in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood.
On the surface, this is a physical milestone, but on a deeper level, it’s a statement about what we believe in and where we’re headed as a company.
We’re choosing to grow in San Francisco deliberately because it aligns with Supio’s mission, our momentum, and our long‑term view of building a world-class company with world-class talent.
Why San Francisco
San Francisco has always been a city where ambitious technology is built.
It’s a place that attracts people who want to work on hard problems that require technical depth, ethical rigor, and long‑term thinking. That matters deeply to us.
At Supio, we’re building AI systems that operate in a high‑stakes environment. Our technology helps legal teams make sense of fragmented, technical medical and legal records so they can advocate more effectively for people who’ve been injured and often put in impossible situations.
That kind of work requires engineers and talent who understand not just how to build, but how to build carefully and with intentionality.
San Francisco remains one of the strongest places in the world to find engineers, data scientists, designers, and operators who care about doing this right—people who are thoughtful about accuracy, transparency, and accountability, not just speed.
Just as important, the city shares our values. We believe technology should be judged by its real‑world outcomes. By whether it improves people’s lives, strengthens institutions, and earns trust over time. San Francisco’s leadership in technology and its willingness to wrestle openly with the consequences of innovation make it a natural home for the next phase of Supio.
A Signal of Growth
Opening a San Francisco office is also a reflection of how quickly Supio has grown.
Over the past year, our company has scaled rapidly in our customer base, in product scope, and in the complexity of the problems we’re solving. We’ve been fortunate to earn the trust of leading investors and partners who believe in our long‑term vision, and that support has allowed us to invest meaningfully in our team and our infrastructure.
Our San Francisco office launches with approximately 50 full‑time, locally based employees, working in the office multiple days per week. These roles span engineering, data science, product, marketing, sales, and operations.
This isn’t a satellite office with a handful of desks. It will be a core hub for Supio, designed to support deep collaboration as we continue building a platform that works the full lifecycle of a personal injury case.
San Francisco will also become a home base for many of our company-wide gatherings, including leadership off-sites, investor meetings, and customer and partner events.
Building AI That Attorneys Can Trust
Personal injury law is high-stakes work. Attorneys are advocating for people at some of the hardest moments of their lives. The tools they rely on must be accurate, defensible, and grounded in the real case data.
That’s why Supio combines AI-native design with human expert verification. It’s why our platform prioritizes precision and accuracy, without sacrificing speed. And it’s why we obsess over customer outcomes—faster time-on-desk, stronger demands, better case strategy, and higher case value.
Opening an office in San Francisco helps us do this work better. In-person collaboration matters when you’re building systems that need to hold up under scrutiny, and being close to world-class AI talent accelerates how we learn, iterate, and lead with AI.
Looking Ahead
Every chapter of Supio’s growth comes back to one question: Does this help our customers deliver better outcomes for their clients?
We believe opening an office in San Francisco does.
It will strengthen how we build, bring us closer to the talent and community shaping responsible AI, and anchor the next phase of Supio in a city that understands both the power and the promise of technology.
I’m proud of the team that made this possible, grateful to the city for welcoming us, and excited for what we’ll build here.
— Jerry

