SERVESSolo · Small · Mid-sized firms
FORMATFixed-fee · 1-8 wks
JURIS.50 states + DC
BOOKINGThrough July 2026
STATUSAccepting
[ AI GUIDANCE TRACKER ]

Alaska.

Attorney AI ethics guidance status for Alaska as of May 9, 2026. No formal AI-specific opinion as of May 2026.

STATUSNO FORMAL OPINION
CITATION
YEAR
VERIFIED
POSTURENot legal advice
· 01 ·

Alaska bar AI ethics status.

Alaska AI ethics guidance status badge — IXSOR

The Alaska Bar Association has not issued a formal AI-specific opinion. ABA Op. 512 applies as persuasive authority. Practitioners should monitor the Alaska Bar Ethics Opinions index for updates.

Authoritative source: https://alaskabar.org/for-our-members/ethics/ethics-opinions/

Last verified: . If this row text disagrees with the linked source, the source controls.

· 02 ·

What this means in practice.

For practitioners admitted in Alaska, the absence of a formal Alaska-specific AI opinion does not mean AI use is unregulated. ABA Formal Opinion 512 (July 2024) is treated as persuasive authority by Alaska as it is in other no-formal-opinion states. The recurring duties under the Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct apply to AI use the same way they apply to any other technology: competence (Rule 1.1), confidentiality (Rule 1.6), supervision (Rule 5.3), and candor to the tribunal (Rule 3.3).

Practitioners should treat ABA Op. 512 as the operating reference until Alaska-specific guidance issues. Monitor the source link above for updates.

· 03 ·

Comparison to ABA Op. 512.

No state-level opinion exists to compare against ABA Formal Opinion 512 (July 2024). ABA Op. 512 governs as persuasive authority in Alaska, applied through the Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct (which mirror the ABA Model Rules). The recurring duties imported are: competence (Rule 1.1, including technological competence), communication (Rule 1.4), reasonable fees (Rule 1.5), confidentiality (Rule 1.6), candor toward the tribunal (Rule 3.3), and supervision (Rules 5.1 / 5.3). Practitioners should treat ABA Op. 512 as the operating reference until Alaska-specific guidance issues.

· 04 ·

Federal court AI standing orders affecting Alaska practitioners.

No widely-noted court-wide or individual-judge AI standing orders affecting Alaska's federal districts have surfaced as of May 2026. Individual judges may have issued orders that are not in our representative list. Practitioners should consult each assigned judge's standing orders before filing in any federal matter. The comprehensive corpus of federal-judge AI orders is maintained by Bloomberg Law and Law360 (both paywalled).

Last verified: . The comprehensive corpus of federal-judge AI orders is maintained by Bloomberg Law and Law360.

· 05 ·

AI case-law context for Alaska.

Alaska sits within the 9th Circuit (United States Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit). Decisions of the 9th Circuit are binding on the federal courts within Alaska; state-court decisions of the Alaska appellate system bind Alaska's state courts; Supreme Court decisions are binding on everyone. The Supreme Court has not yet issued a decision directly addressing attorney AI use, so the controlling case law is at the circuit and district levels:

Tremblay v. OpenAI, Inc.

Case No. 23-cv-03223-AMO, 2024 WL 3748003 (N.D. Cal. Aug. 8, 2024) (Martínez-Olguín, J.) — held that attorney-crafted prompts to AI systems can constitute opinion work product. The leading 9th Circuit decision on AI in legal practice; persuasive nationally.

Multiple N.D. Cal. and C.D. Cal. judges

have issued individual AI standing orders. The 9th Circuit has not issued a circuit-wide rule.

Persuasive authority

Mata v. Avianca and Park v. Kim are routinely cited as persuasive authority in 9th Circuit federal courts.

Practitioners in Alaska should treat the cases above as the operating framework for AI-related conduct until Alaska-specific binding precedent or Alaska bar guidance controls a particular question. The verification duty under Mata and Park v. Kim has been routinely cited in sanctions matters across all federal circuits including the 9th Circuit.

· 06 ·

Alaska legal landscape.

BAR SIZE~4,000 active attorneys (approximate)
HIGH COURTSupreme Court of Alaska, 5 justices
FEDERAL DISTRICTDistrict of Alaska (D. Alaska)
BAR MODELMandatory unified bar

Alaska has one of the smallest legal markets by attorney count in the US. The Alaska Bar Association is a mandatory unified bar. Alaska is unique among US jurisdictions for its heavy emphasis on subsistence rights, federal lands law (Alaska is roughly 60% federally owned), Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act practice, and oil-and-gas (North Slope, Trans-Alaska Pipeline) work. The University of Alaska does not have a law school; Alaskan attorneys generally complete law school out-of-state and are admitted by exam. Alaska's sole federal district sits in Anchorage with a part-time presence in Fairbanks and Juneau.

Most US states have adopted the substance of ABA Model Rule 1.1, Comment 8 — that the duty of competence requires lawyers to keep abreast of the benefits and risks of relevant technology. Whether Alaska has adopted Comment 8 verbatim, in modified form, or relies on the underlying Rule 1.1 text alone, the substantive duty of technological competence applies to AI-related practice in Alaska.

For multi-state practitioners admitted in Alaska alongside other jurisdictions, the absence of a Alaska-specific opinion means the most-restrictive applicable rule from any admission jurisdiction controls AI-related conduct in the matter. Where ABA Op. 512 conflicts with another state's rule, the lawyer must reconcile the duties under both regimes.

· 07 ·

When might Alaska issue formal AI guidance?

Forecast signal: unclear — no announced project.

Small-bar states like Alaska typically lag larger jurisdictions on opinion issuance because the ethics committee tends to draw on volunteer attorneys with finite committee bandwidth. Realistically, a Alaska-specific AI ethics opinion is most likely in 2026 or 2027, depending on whether AI emerges as a priority topic for the Alaska ethics committee's upcoming opinion calendar. Practitioners should not expect immediate guidance.

What practitioners can watch for, in roughly the order in which they would appear: (1) committee announcement on the Alaska bar website that an AI ethics opinion is under consideration; (2) draft circulated for comment (public comment period typically 30–60 days); (3) final approved opinion published in the bar's ethics-opinions index. The transitions from (1) to (3) typically span 4–8 months in active jurisdictions, longer in less active ones.

Until then, practitioners should default to ABA Formal Opinion 512 (July 2024) as the persuasive operating framework, supplemented by the controlling case-law in §05 above and the Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct as applied to technology use generally.

Alaska-specific FAQ.

Has the Alaska bar issued formal AI ethics guidance?

No. As of May 2026, no formal AI-specific opinion has been issued by the Alaska bar. ABA Formal Opinion 512 (July 2024) governs as persuasive authority. The Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct (competence, confidentiality, supervision, candor) apply to AI-related practice the same way they apply to any other technology.

Which federal district covers Alaska?

Alaska has one federal district: District of Alaska (D. Alaska). AI-specific standing orders are typically issued at the individual-judge level rather than court-wide. Practitioners should consult each assigned judge's standing orders before filing.

Does Alaska have a mandatory unified bar?

Yes. The Alaska bar is a mandatory unified bar — all licensed attorneys must be members. AI ethics guidance issued by the bar applies to all admitted practitioners. Discipline for AI-related misconduct flows through the bar's formal disciplinary regime under the Supreme Court of Alaska's plenary supervisory authority.

How should a Alaska attorney comply with AI-related ethics rules absent a Alaska-specific opinion?

Treat ABA Formal Opinion 512 as the operating reference. Apply the standard duties under the Alaska Rules of Professional Conduct: competence (Rule 1.1), confidentiality (Rule 1.6), supervision (Rule 5.3), candor toward the tribunal (Rule 3.3), and reasonableness of fees (Rule 1.5). Verify all AI-generated content before submission. Use closed-loop AI tools (not public consumer-grade) for any matter involving client information.

What about small-firm and solo practitioners in Alaska?

Alaska has approximately 4,000 active attorneys, making it one of the smaller US legal markets. Small-firm practitioners predominate. AI tooling decisions have outsized stakes for solo and small firms because the same tool will touch many matters; vendor diligence is therefore especially important. Closed-loop enterprise tiers from major foundation-model vendors are commercially accessible to firms of any size.

Does AI vendor diligence apply in Alaska?

Yes. The supervisory duty under Alaska's analog to Rule 5.3 (responsibilities regarding nonlawyer assistance) applies to AI vendor relationships. North Carolina's 2024 FEO 1 frames AI vendors explicitly under Rule 5.3, and that framing has been treated as persuasive in other jurisdictions including Alaska. Vendor diligence — privacy-policy review, data-retention terms, training-on-customer-data clauses — is a precondition to selecting an AI tool for client work.