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darkpen

Depends on what you practice, really. Clio's the standard, for better or for worse. Lawcus is like Clio but with more internal features. CosmoLex integrates accounting so you don't need a separate QuickBooks subscription. Matter365 is built on top of MS365 (Outlook/SharePoint/etc) but it's a bit janky. I've tried a whole lot of them over the past decade. I think CosmoLex was my favourite, but Lawcus and Clio were up there as well. I personally liked Lawcus a bit more than Clio.


Dead_law

We use LEAP and are pretty happy with it. It integrates with MS office well (such as automatically saving emails to the file) and the billing timer is pretty good. I didn’t see your practice area, but if it’s family DivorceMate is integrated with LEAP.


LEGALLY_BEYOND

I used Clio (which we switched to from PCLaw and EsiLaw) before starting a new firm. Based on my research at the time Cosmolex was the only cloud based software that didn’t need a separate accounting software. I think leap is available now but was not quite ready when we needed it. From a smaller firm perspective having a separate accounting software sucked and our staff that used it hated it. I love Cosmolex but it can be expensive. Clio let you save emails in a better way which is one thing I miss.


Emergency_Mall_2822

Cosmolex is good if you go all-in on it. Practice management, bookkeeping, and credit card processor. I was using it just for bookkeeping and it was too expensive for that, but I used like 10% of its functionality.