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Industries · law firms

Trust ledgers that tie three ways. Every month.

Bank, trust ledger, client ledgers — reconciled to the penny, monthly, documented. We keep your IOLTA records to the standard your obligation requires; the bar-compliance responsibility stays where the rules put it — with you. We make carrying it easy.

Bookkeeping only — not legal advice, not a compliance guarantee, not CPA work. Records kept so compliance is demonstrable.

Three-way, monthly Matter costing kept clean
BANK STATEMENT $ ████.██ TRUST LEDGER $ ████.██ CLIENT LEDGERS one per client · none below zero Σ ████ BANK = BOOK = Σ CLIENTS THREE WAYS · TO THE PENNY · MONTHLY

In brief

Law-firm books, in plain terms.

What's the core discipline?

Three-way reconciliation, monthly: the trust bank statement, the firm's trust ledger, and the sum of every client's individual ledger must agree to the penny — documented, every month, no exceptions.

Who carries bar compliance?

You do — the rules put trust-account responsibility on the attorney, and no bookkeeper can take it over. We keep the records that make your compliance demonstrable; the obligation stays yours, stated plainly.

What else is in scope?

Matter costing (advanced client costs by matter, hard/soft kept distinct), operating-account bookkeeping, and the monthly close — billings-vs-collections readable, run to the by-the-10th standard.

What does it cost?

Monthly from ~$450 (typical $450–$1,500 — trust work adds real moving parts), cleanup typically $1,500–$5,000. Fixed fee in writing after a free review — no hourly billing. Pricing →

The highest-stakes ledger

Trust accounting, kept provable.

Client money in trust is the one place where bookkeeping errors stop being accounting problems. The disciplines are unglamorous and absolute: a ledger per client, so every dollar held is attributable; no client balance ever below zero, because one client's matter can never borrow from another's; firm money never mingled, beyond what your bank requires to keep the account open; and every movement documented at the time it happens, not reconstructed later.

The monthly proof is the three-way reconciliation: bank statement, trust ledger, and the sum of client ledgers, agreeing to the penny. When a firm hands us a trust account that hasn't been reconciled that way, the cleanup starts there — rebuilt from source, tied out month by month, and anything that doesn't tie surfaced to you immediately rather than smoothed over. Early surfacing is the entire value of the work.

Three-way, monthly, documented

Bank = book = Σ client ledgers — the reconciliation an auditor asks for first, on file every month.

Matter costing

Advanced costs by matter, hard and soft distinct, reimbursements matched — billing decisions on real numbers.

The operating side too

The firm's own books — billings vs collections, payroll support, a monthly close to the standard.

Never claimed

Legal advice, bar-compliance responsibility, tax or audit work. Your obligations stay yours; our records make them easy to meet.

Law-firm FAQ

The questions managing partners ask.

Client money a firm holds — retainers not yet earned, settlement funds awaiting disbursement — lives in a trust account (commonly an IOLTA account), legally separate from the firm's operating money. Trust accounting is the bookkeeping that keeps that separation provable: a ledger per client, no client's balance ever below zero, no firm money mingled in, and every movement documented. It's the highest-stakes bookkeeping a small firm has, because errors aren't just accounting problems.
The trust account's three views must agree every month: the bank statement balance, the firm's trust ledger total, and the sum of every individual client's ledger. Bank = book = sum of client ledgers — all three, to the penny, documented. If any pair disagrees, something is wrong and must be found, not papered over. We run this reconciliation monthly as the core discipline of law-firm bookkeeping.
The attorney — plainly and always. State bar rules place trust-account responsibility on the lawyer, and no bookkeeper can take that obligation over. What we do is make compliance demonstrable: accurate client ledgers, monthly three-way reconciliations, documentation that answers an auditor's questions. We keep the records to the standard your obligation requires; the obligation itself stays yours, and we'd distrust any bookkeeper who claimed otherwise.
Yes — the bookkeeping side: advanced client costs tracked by matter, hard and soft costs kept distinct, reimbursements matched when they land, and matter-level views your billing decisions can rely on. How those costs are treated on the tax return is your CPA's call; our books make it a clean one.
Yes — carefully and in order. Trust cleanup means rebuilding client ledgers from source, reconciling each month three ways, identifying any ledger that doesn't tie, and documenting everything. We'll tell you plainly what we find, including when something needs your bar's guidance or your CPA — surfacing it early is the entire point of the work.
Published framing as always: monthly bookkeeping from around $450/month (typical $450–$1,500 — trust accounting and matter costing add real moving parts), one-time cleanup typically $1,500–$5,000. Fixed fee in writing after a free review; no hourly billing from us, which lawyers tend to appreciate more than most.

More industries: who we serve → · reporting you can read: the senior read →

For firms that hold client money

Get your trust books reviewed — free, discreet.

A senior operator looks at where your trust and operating books stand and tells you plainly what ties, what doesn't, and the fixed-fee scope to make it provable. Confidential, no obligation.

Three-way, every month Anything off, surfaced early Fixed fee, in writing
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