Clio | Xero | QBO Accounting for Law Firms

Accounting for Attorneys

Explore legal accounting essentials: compliance, financial management, tech tools, taxation, and strategic insights for attorneys' financial success.

The Financial Metrics That Help Law Firms Grow Smarter

Law firms are built on legal skill, client service, and hard work. But growth does not happen on effort alone.

If you want to build a stronger, more profitable law firm, you need more than a general sense that things are “going well.” You need financial clarity. You need operational visibility. And you need metrics that help you make decisions before problems become expensive.

That does not mean you need to become an accountant. It does mean your firm needs to understand what the numbers are saying.

The law firms that grow well tend to have one thing in common: they stop managing by instinct alone and start paying attention to the right financial and operational metrics.

Why Good Data Matters More Than Ever

Many attorneys are trained to practice law, not run a business. That is perfectly normal. Law school does not typically teach how to manage cash flow, evaluate staffing capacity, measure profitability, or build a financial strategy for growth.

But your law firm is still a busi...

Continue Reading...

10 Financial Red Flags Lawyers Should Never Ignore

If you’ve ever had a quiet thought of, “I hope no one ever really looks under the hood of these books,” this one’s for you.

At The Proper Trust, we spend our days (and more late nights than we’ll admit) inside law firm financials. We see the same patterns over and over, especially with firms who suspect something is off but can’t quite name it.

This blog is your financial health check: a tour of the biggest red flags we see in law firm accounting, what they actually mean, and when it’s time to bring in a specialist who lives and breathes legal bookkeeping.

1. Your Trust Account and Your Reports Don’t Match

Let’s start with the one that keeps lawyers up at night.

A quick self-test:

  1. Run a Balance Sheet in your accounting software (e.g., QuickBooks Online).

  2. Look at your trust bank account balance.

  3. Look at your client trust liability total (often stored as “Funds held in trust” with individual client sub-accounts).

Those two numbers should match.

If they don’t, th...

Continue Reading...
Close

50% Complete

Two Step

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.