When it comes to managing contracts, DocuSign is the name everyone recognizes but Contractbook is the name that is quickly becoming the favorite for data-driven operations.
While both contract management platforms allow you to sign documents digitally, the philosophy behind them is completely different. DocuSign is built to be the world’s most secure signature and CLM ecosystem, while Contractbook is built to turn your contracts into a structured database.
Here is the head-to-head breakdown based on the latest 2026 user data.
If you look at the numbers on G2, you see an interesting story.
Contractbook holds a higher overall rating of 4.7/5, compared to DocuSign’s 4.5/5.
However, size matters here.
DocuSign has significantly more reviews, meaning it is battle-tested across almost every industry on earth. One of the reasons Contractbook scores higher is due to its modern interface and the fact that users feel less like a "small fish in a big pond" when dealing with their support teams.
Right, so the biggest difference is how these two tools view a "completed" contract.
This is where the two platforms diverge for scaling teams.
|
Feature |
Contractbook |
DocuSign |
|
G2 Rating |
4.7 / 5 |
4.5 / 5 |
|
Signing Capability |
9.3 / 10 |
9.5 / 10 |
|
Best For |
Data-driven startups & Ops |
Global Enterprise & Legal |
|
Philosophy |
"Contracts as Data" |
"Contracts as Secure Documents" |
|
Ease of Setup |
High |
Moderate (CLM is complex) |
And there you have it!
To recap:
If you have any other questions or would like to find more about other contractbook alternatives, feel free to book a demo with us!